On 04/25/2019 01:27 PM, David Mason via talk wrote:
> Part of my question was whether anyone else is using POE access
> points, and whether it’s worth doing as right now I have an extension
> cord running to the router. If so I’d need a router that supported
> POE, so I mentioned the Ubiquiti EdgeR
Is there an openwrt non-wifi, PoE router? Also the WRT1900ACv2 seems to have
limited availability.
../Dave
>
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I have a Netgate SG-1000 running pfsense inside my bridge-mode Rogers
modem, which has been replaced by the slightly bigger SG-1100 ($159 USD).
In the furnace room, and then some cat5 heads off to more convenient
spots for access points, etc.
I like separate access points, which are sometimes hard
On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 01:27:02PM -0400, David Mason via talk wrote:
> This (letting the router do all the work) is a possibility, but the router is
> very far from all the other connections, so at the moment I have a long RJ45
> cable to the router. So I’d have to run another long cable back to
This (letting the router do all the work) is a possibility, but the router is
very far from all the other connections, so at the moment I have a long RJ45
cable to the router. So I’d have to run another long cable back to the switch
where everything else is plugged in.
Part of my question was w
On Thu, 25 Apr 2019 at 10:57, Lennart Sorensen via talk
wrote:
> > If you actually use the Bell router functions, what do you use your
> > own router for?
> >
> > - an AP + a switch?
> >
> > - double-NATting (seems like a bad idea)?
>
> Agreed. I run my VDSL2 modem in bridged mode with it's wifi
I drilled out the rivets. Non-replaceable fuse was good, but the on-off
timer switch was flakey, and probably not replaceable. I just scrapped a
$250 convection oven due to an on-off switch. I am sad.
On Thu, 25 Apr 2019 at 11:31, mwilson--- via talk wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 9:59 AM Do
> On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 9:59 AM Don Tai via talk wrote:
>>
>> A seemingly brand new small convection oven, Delonghi EO1270, made in
>> China, came my way. Pristine clean and obviously unused, but did not
[ ... ]
> I would suggest that pop rivets are quite cheap and I'd doubt you
> actually 'need
On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 9:59 AM Don Tai via talk wrote:
>
> A seemingly brand new small convection oven, Delonghi EO1270, made in China,
> came my way. Pristine clean and obviously unused, but did not work.
> https://www.amazon.ca/DeLonghi-EO1270-6-Slice-Convection-Toaster/dp/B003ZDNKV0
>
> I st
A seemingly brand new small convection oven, Delonghi EO1270, made in
China, came my way. Pristine clean and obviously unused, but did not work.
https://www.amazon.ca/DeLonghi-EO1270-6-Slice-Convection-Toaster/dp/B003ZDNKV0
I started taking it apart to troubleshoot. The electronics are on the left
On Wed, Apr 24, 2019 at 11:30:22PM -0400, D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk wrote:
> I'm confused about the network topology you are describing.
>
> Which router is "the" router? Bell's modem/router or your (non-Bell)
> router?
>
> Which router is "it"?
>
> Context
>
> Almost all homes ne
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