I am putting together a bid for a campus wireless install. I've found that out
of the 16 access points, 12 of them can be cabled to one data closet.
Is there a 'MT way' of providing power to a dozen APs? They will likely be
411s or possibly 7xx series. I see the 750 model that can output
doesn't seem like the right way.
put in Ubiquiti UAPs and forget they're there. when all those tiks
fail ( and its not a question of if but when ) you're gonna kick
yourself
R
On Jan 30, 2013, at 11:12 AM, Corey Freeman co...@freephoenix.net wrote:
I am putting together a bid for a campus
I have plenty of Mikrotik devices in the field that have lasted a long time,
both in wireless environments and not. I think I still have a smattering of 1xx
and 5xx boards out there with whatever wireless cards were available at the
time. That said, this is the domain of the UniFi. I'd also use
How is working unifi in comparison a RB411AR with a rubber antenna?
MartÃn Ruiz
2013/1/30 Mike Hammett butch-mikro...@ics-il.net
I have plenty of Mikrotik devices in the field that have lasted a long time,
both in wireless environments and not. I think I still have a smattering of
1xx
Aesthetics and management are far superior.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
- Original Message -
From: Martin Ruiz Ibersystems martinr...@ibersystems.es
To: Mikrotik discussions mikrotik@mail.butchevans.com
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013
What do ya know, I just got an e-mail from DoubleRadius advertising some
amazing UniFi sale. ;-)
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
- Original Message -
From: Rick Smith onyx3...@gmail.com
To: Mikrotik discussions mikrotik@mail.butchevans.com
I have seen mikrotik running for years in the outdoor (e.g. 532) so that
is not a big issue. I guess you will hear horror stories on both sides
I would suggest you to use what you feel more comfortable with.
I have tested unifi and I did not like them. Ppersonally I prefer
mikrotik for our
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Hey guys,
So I decided to set myself up with a couple of free tunnels from HE so I
could play around with IPv6. I've got everything up and working
correctly, but one thing I'm nervous about is that with my computers now
publicly accessible via IPv6, what is the best way to protect/firewall
Look in the WISPA Wiki for a place to start.
Hang out on, and check the archive of, the WISPA IPv6 maillist.
On 1/30/2013 4:42 PM, Rory McCann wrote:
Hey guys,
So I decided to set myself up with a couple of free tunnels from HE so
I could play around with IPv6. I've got everything up and
We just use a very simple 'nat' type firewall. If it didn't originate from us,
then drop it.
/ipv6 firewall filter
add action=accept chain=forward comment=Established connection-state=\
established disabled=no
add action=accept chain=forward comment=Related
On 31/01/2013 11:06 a.m., Keith Barber wrote:
add action=drop chain=forward comment=Drop netbios disabled=no dst-port=\
135-139,445 protocol=tcp
add action=drop chain=forward comment=Drop netbios disabled=no dst-port=\
135-139,445 protocol=udp
add action=accept chain=forward
Hi Rory,
http://www.jrwz.net/technical/mikrotik-ipv6/s06.html
You will note that he accepts icmpv6 traffic.
2 chain=forward action=accept protocol=icmpv6
I was concerned about this, so I raised some discussion around our local
NOG about it at the time.
It seems that if you don't accept
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