I also have all Ubiquiti stuff at home, and I’ve deployed it in large installations of up to 100 APs. Beyond that it seems to hit some communication bottleneck in its spectrum allocation protocols, so I usually go to Aruba or Ruckus for networks larger than that.
Ubiquiti is pretty reliable, but you have to stay away from the latest release, just like anything. Its SDN implementation is quite impressive for what it does, especially for the fact that you get it for free (i’m talking to you, Cisco DNA :-). The only major downside is that it’s all Ubiquiti all the time: they don’t interoperate with anything else. -mel via cell > On Oct 29, 2020, at 12:24 PM, Peter Beckman <beck...@angryox.com> wrote: > > I'd need more data than your anecdotal experience with a POE device to > throw out my Unifi gear and ban the company. But I'm dealing with 2 > devices: a Security Gateway and a single Access Point (plus the Controller > software running on my Mac). > > There are some quirky things about Unifi that can be annoying, but it is > mostly around common stuff like running a DNS Caching server on the > Security Gateway or force-pushing a DDNS update. > > It's been way better than the ad-hoc varied brand of network I was running > before, and I get to see and manage a lot more as well, quite reliably. > > We all know that hardware failures happen, and you definitely had a bad > experience, and that sucks. > > I'll take all of your Unifi gear, PM me for an address. :-) > > Beckman > >> On Thu, 29 Oct 2020, Aaron C. de Bruyn via NANOG wrote: >> >>> On Thu, Oct 29, 2020 at 5:43 AM Jared Mauch <ja...@puck.nether.net> wrote: >>> >>> I have all UBNT at home for wireless and periodically have some >>> random >>> issues which I can't explain, but for the most part have things tuned to >>> ensure >>> there's little to no interference. >>> >> >> All UBNT at home? Ouch. >> >> They're on my banned list after one of their POE devices caught on fire >> after being in service for 11 months. >> Then they went round and round for a week saying they weren't going to pay >> for a shipping label. I wasn't going to pay for one because I didn't want >> their gear back. >> >> Finally someone with a bit of common sense sent a shipping label so they >> could figure out why it caught on fire. >> They ended up sending a replacement back that was obviously used. Instead >> of letting it go to waste, I installed it. >> It died two weeks later. When I contacted them, they said the original >> purchase was over a year ago so they wouldn't RMA it. >> >> Then a second device (plugged into an entirely different switch in a >> different building) started smoking and emitting an electrical smell. I >> pulled all of them and tossed them in the dumpster. >> >> They are an absolutely atrocious company to deal with. I'm betting some >> day real soon they'll be sued into oblivion when their crap burns down >> someone's home or office building. >> >> Friends don't let friends buy UniFi. >> >> -A >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Peter Beckman Internet Guy > beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/ > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------