On 1 apr 2010, at 02:04, Nick Hilliard wrote:
On 31/03/2010 23:55, Charles N Wyble wrote:
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the high
end d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences with those
(netgear in particular).
Some people have said that
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 01:04:29 +0100, Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
On 31/03/2010 23:55, Charles N Wyble wrote:
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the
high
end d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences with
those
(netgear in particular).
Charles N Wyble char...@knownelement.com writes:
Should one get a real cisco router? The 877 or something?
871 works very well here. You may find on heap on eBay. But *don't* get
an 861. Last time i checked there was no IOS with IPv6 support for this
model.
My current home router is a cisco
Charles N Wyble char...@knownelement.com writes:
Have you tried pfsense, or do you find the built in
functionality/configuration system to be sufficient?
AFAIK IPv6 is not supported via the GUI, but everything else is okay.
Jens
--
.
-Scott
-Original Message-
From: Charles N Wyble [mailto:char...@knownelement.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 8:46 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Home CPE choice
On 03/31/2010 04:07 PM, William Warren wrote:
I run Astaro on a p-4 celey i had lying around. Get far more than any
Having significant experience with all three products, I will strongly suggest
going with the SRX-100 if at all possible. It's real JunOS, even if it does
take
a bit of bludgeoning to get it to stop impersonating a netscreen security model.
It's the same price the NS5GTs used to sell for
Thank you everyone for your replies! :) It's been great having an
operational type discussion.
Here is my summary of the thread:
Software:
Linux:
Vyatta
IPCop
Astaro
BSD:
pfSense
m0n0wall (I didn't know this was the base for pfSense until I started
researching it today)
Appliances:
Hopefully this e-mail is considered operational content :)
The recent thread on the new linkys kit and ipv6 support got me thinking
about CPE choice.
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the high
end d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences with
I have a small HP dummy terminal I installed a CFIDE card in with m0n0wall that
has run beautifully for the past 3 years. Barely has any power draw and cost me
a whopping $100 after shipping. I keep a few of the dummy terminals around in
case this one dies (it's about 6 years old and came from
On 3/31/2010 6:55 PM, Charles N Wyble wrote:
Hopefully this e-mail is considered operational content :)
The recent thread on the new linkys kit and ipv6 support got me
thinking about CPE choice.
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the
high end
Hopefully this e-mail is considered operational content :)
The recent thread on the new linkys kit and ipv6 support got me
thinking about CPE choice.
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the
high end d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences
Juniper's SSG5 and SRX100 are nice options for home. I've enjoyed an SSG5
for awhile now. SRX100 for junos. SSG5's pop up on ebay occasionally for a
few $100.
-Iain
On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Marty Anstey marty.ans...@sunwave.netwrote:
Hopefully this e-mail is considered
-
From: Charles N Wyble [mailto:char...@knownelement.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 4:56 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Home CPE choice
Hopefully this e-mail is considered operational content :)
The recent thread on the new linkys kit and ipv6 support got me thinking about
CPE choice
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the high end
d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences with those
(netgear in particular).
Should one get a real cisco router?
IMHO, you should look to Japan, Korea and China for suppliers. Even if you
are small,
On 31/03/2010 23:55, Charles N Wyble wrote:
What good off the shelf solutions are out there? Should one buy the high
end d-link/linksys/netgear products? I've had bad experiences with those
(netgear in particular).
Some people have said that the Fritz!box is quite good. No idea if it's
On 03/31/2010 05:04 PM, Nick Hilliard wrote:
On 31/03/2010 23:55, Charles N Wyble wrote:
Some people have said that the Fritz!box is quite good. No idea if
it's approved for use in the US.
Nick,
Thanks for posting this. I wasn't aware of this product. It looks pretty
cool.
On 03/31/2010 04:03 PM, Jack Carrozzo wrote:
Given a marked lack of $significant funding for home routing, I rock
BSD boxen all over.
Cool. I'm looking at pfsense to replace my cisco. I want to move the
router to my lab for CCIE studies.
Have you tried pfsense, or do you find the built in
On 03/31/2010 04:03 PM, Joe Johnson wrote:
I have a small HP dummy terminal I installed a CFIDE card in with m0n0wall that
has run beautifully for the past 3 years.
No moving parts I take it? I think I've played with m0n0wall in the past.
Barely has any power draw and cost me a whopping
On 03/31/2010 04:07 PM, William Warren wrote:
I run Astaro on a p-4 celey i had lying around. Get far more than any
little router you'll see..can't beat the price.
Astaro looks cool. I hadn't heard of it before. Thanks for sharing.
On Mar 31, 2010, at 6:55 PM, Charles N Wyble wrote:
Is there a market for a new breed of CPE running OpenWRT or pfsense on
hardware with enough CPU/RAM to not fall over?
Hi, Charles -- as a few hardware points to consider:
Both the Soekris and Alix hardware is still very solid. We've been
On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 4:34 PM, Blake Pfankuch bpfank...@cpgreeley.comwrote:
I'm running IPcop on a mini ITX machine (old processor out of my laptop
T5500), a cheapo stick of memory and a sata to CF adaptor with a 4gb CF
card. All in all cost me about $350. Been running IPcop's for about 6
Netscreen 5GTs will also do IPv6 with some ScreenOS 5.4 code revs
(5.4.0r10.0 for sure). Those pop up on Ebay for $60ish and make respectable
home CPE devices. Not quite the horsepower of the SSG5 but they seem to
hold up reasonably well.
Dan Jones
Juniper's SSG5 and SRX100 are nice
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