On Mon, Aug 19, 2019 at 10:11 AM Lonnie Olson wrote:
> 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
>
> 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 m
First off:
Agreed, totally sucks to need a desktop app and not have a web interface
like most consumer-grade routers.
However:
I say forget how terrible the desktop app portion of the setup is and move
on to enjoying how reliably and consistently it works.
For me what makes it awesome is that I
On Sat, Aug 17, 2019 at 10:46 AM Charles Curley <
charlescur...@charlescurley.com> 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 t
> A browser on
the same ip network got me to a warning of invalid certificate. Come
on, guys! Accepting that got me in.
Well yeah, ssl certs are validated based off the hostname you're connecting
to. They can't really provide a "valid" certificate since they have no way
of knowing where their soft
On Fri, 16 Aug 2019 22:02:32 -0600
James Alton wrote:
> Secondly, I'd learn how to find what port things run on, regardless if
> instructions are being provided.
>
> $ ps aux | grep unifi
>
> Replace pid below with the pid:
> $ sudo lsof -p pid -i | grep LISTEN
>
> You should find that the uni
On 8/16/19 7:15 PM, Charles Curley wrote:
Unless someone has some good advice, I'm going to ship it back with
some of what I said here and elsewhere, and order something else that
does not require me to install a bunch of software.
Not all things are the same--I know we I Ubiquity, but specifi
First off, the unifi daemon runs on a non-standard port.
Secondly, I'd learn how to find what port things run on, regardless if
instructions are being provided.
$ ps aux | grep unifi
Replace pid below with the pid:
$ sudo lsof -p pid -i | grep LISTEN
You should find that the unifi daemon is lis
On Fri, Aug 16, 2019 at 7:15 PM Charles Curley <
charlescur...@charlescurley.com> wrote:
> I had a Ubiquiti UAP-AC-LITE show up from Amazon today. I got it
> physically set up and plugged into my dhcp server. Host name "klaatu",
> of course.
>
> It lights up, gets an IP address, and responds to pi
I had a Ubiquiti UAP-AC-LITE show up from Amazon today. I got it
physically set up and plugged into my dhcp server. Host name "klaatu",
of course.
It lights up, gets an IP address, and responds to pings. That's nice.
The software, on the other tentacle, is a train wreck. I built a VM
with debian
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