>
> Ubiquity's Unifi line, like the UAP is really powerful and cool.

This might be a your vs you're -ism, but what is Ubiquity? Did you mean
Ubiquiti? In a group of technically minded people, I'd think a repeated
typo might be something that sticks out like a syntax error, but maybe
that's just me.


On Mon, Aug 19, 2019 at 10:12 AM Lonnie Olson <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sat, Aug 17, 2019 at 10:46 AM Charles Curley <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Thanks. That and Olli Ries' reply got me further along. A browser on
> > the same ip network got me to a warning of invalid certificate. Come
> > on, guys! Accepting that got me in.
> >
> > The setup went OK from there. It did not find the AP, possibly because
> > of firewalling issues. The VM and the AP are on different class C
> > networks. I noticed that the Unifi software couldn't even correctly
> > detect the network it is on.
> >
> > My initial reaction is that this stuff is fine for a large network, say
> > a corporation or big office. It is way overkill for what I want to do,
> > and the further time and effort I would have to put into configuring
> > the VM and the Unifi software just aren't worth it. So back goes the AP.
> >
> > Thanks for the support, folks.
> >
>
> Ubiquity's Unifi line, like the UAP is really powerful and cool.  This
> power does come with some complexity in the external controller software.
>
> The extra complexity is likely overkill and not worth the effort if you
> only plan to use a single AP.  Some people consider this to be only useful
> in a large network, but I disagree.  It's really useful if you have more
> than one device for the controller to manage (router, switch, APs, etc),
> even on a small home network.
> I use 2 Unifi APs in my home, so the controller software benefits me by
> simplifying AP configuration, monitoring, and management.  I wouldn't
> choose it for a single AP.
>
> The controller is best to run on the same subnet as your managed devices
> because it uses broadcast type discovery techniques to make setup simple.
> The controller can run on your own machine, a VM, their separate hardware
> CloudKey device, or even a RaspberryPi.
>
> If your house only requires a single AP to get the needed coverage, then
> skip the Unifi line.
> If you need more than a single AP, consider the mesh networking
> capabilities of the Ubiquity Amplifi line.  The Amplifi is super simple and
> makes getting coverage around a house easy, no extra network wiring
> needed.  It doesn't have the same performance as separate APs but the
> simplicity may be worth it, and the performance sufficient.
> If you want max performance, and have the wiring in place, installing
> multiple APs may be your best bet.  This solution is where the Unifi line
> of APs and controller really shines.
>
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