How about the new Cambium line of cnPilot routers?  They look interesting.

On Wed, Oct 7, 2015 at 12:41 PM, Adam Moffett <dmmoff...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I agree with Mikrotik as long as the ISP owns and manages it.  If you're
> *selling* it to the customer I think you need something simpler because
> most people can't be trusted not to do something awful like put a hotspot
> service on the WAN interface.
>
>
> On 10/7/2015 12:36 PM, Paul McCall wrote:
>
> Really hard to beat a Mikrotik, unless you need/want 5 Ghz, which they
> really don’t have a complete consumer product for.
>
>
>
> Putting Tik’s in everywhere was the best thing we ever did to improve
> customer performance, satisfaction, and we can troubleshoot almost anything
> with them in the house.
>
>
>
> Paul
>
>
>
> *From:* Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com <af-boun...@afmug.com>] *On
> Behalf Of *Brett A Mansfield
> *Sent:* Wednesday, October 07, 2015 12:31 PM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Consumer routers?
>
>
>
> I've had very bad luck with Belkin, D-Link, Asus (the worst), linksys, and
> low end netgear. I've had great success with the higher end netgear and the
> 3rd through 5th gen Apple AirPort Extreme. Prior to the 3rd gen and the 6th
> gen (latest) airports are junk. So I'm with you, pretty much every consumer
> grade router is trash now.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Brett A Mansfield
>
>
> On Oct 7, 2015, at 9:58 AM, Glen Waldrop < <gwl...@cngwireless.net>
> gwl...@cngwireless.net> wrote:
>
> Are there any consumer routers that don't suck these days?
>
> I used to recommend Linksys/Cisco, but since the Belkin buyout quality
> seems to be going down. They jink with teh firewall and I can't block
> specific outgoing traffic, can't remote admin anymore, etc...
>
>
>

Reply via email to