Show me yo router, bitch!
#1
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Show me yo router, bitch!
But seriously.
What router do you guys use? I'm primarily interested in Reverant and Shoes but anyone with good router advice I am fine with.
Looking for something that will give me absolutely painless port forwarding, wireless, etc.
I don't mind paying up to a low-end Cisco enterprise router if it's 100% rock solid and dd-wrt compatibility would be superb, but I want something either cheap and disposable, or expensive and will last me a decade.
Oh. And it absolutely *must* have gigabit ports. The WRT54GL would be my hands down pick if not for that.
What router do you guys use? I'm primarily interested in Reverant and Shoes but anyone with good router advice I am fine with.
Looking for something that will give me absolutely painless port forwarding, wireless, etc.
I don't mind paying up to a low-end Cisco enterprise router if it's 100% rock solid and dd-wrt compatibility would be superb, but I want something either cheap and disposable, or expensive and will last me a decade.
Oh. And it absolutely *must* have gigabit ports. The WRT54GL would be my hands down pick if not for that.
#2
I have a buffalo wireless router. Comes with DD-WRT out of the box. wireless N, 4 gigabit ports and a USB port (where Asterisk will be installed at some point for VoIP calling). It works flawlessly with a slight hack that is easy to perform and well documented.
#3
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I has this
Newegg.com - D-Link Xtreme Gigabit Router (DIR-655) Wireless N300, USB SharePort, Gigabit
I really like the D-Link interface
Newegg.com - D-Link Xtreme Gigabit Router (DIR-655) Wireless N300, USB SharePort, Gigabit
I really like the D-Link interface
#4
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I just picked up a Linksys E2000 to replace my WRT54G. I got a good 8 years out of my WRT54G and it was sad seeing it die.
So far I am still on stock firmware, but am planning on upgrading to DD-WRT in the very near future. It has been rock stable and you can pick up refurbished ones for about $40 which is what I did. It is truthfully what I would recommend as a replacement.
So far I am still on stock firmware, but am planning on upgrading to DD-WRT in the very near future. It has been rock stable and you can pick up refurbished ones for about $40 which is what I did. It is truthfully what I would recommend as a replacement.
#5
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Everyone, thank you for your advice.
Shoes, I strongly dislike the Exxxx series from Linksys due to reports of lacking wired performance. (Reviews I've read peg them as low as 400mbps sustained)
Full Tilt Boogie: I love the DIR-655! I have had two, but they don't do what I need to do anymore. I am sad in the pants, I loved those routers.
After research, my current shortlist is
ASUS RT-N66U
ASUS RT-AC66U
WD MyNet Central N900 (2TB)
I love the WD concept, especially being able to use it as a WAN-facing storage device and leave my NAS solely connected to my internal network. But it has no ddwrt, which makes me seriously sad in the pants.
Although these are among the top performing routers currently available, the problem I have with them all is anemic wired performance.
I currently can get sustained 900mbps+ with my network set up with just a Cisco switch and Linux PC acting as the brains of the router. The highest I've seen of the above routers is in the 630-650mbps sustained range.
300mbps is a big freaking deal for me, when I transfer hundreds of gigabytes to terabytes daily (Don't ask unless you really want details - it involves databases.)
However, I'm getting very fed up with wireless that can't access the WAN on my Linux router setup. That's my only major beef with it and it's a serious deal killer for me.
Shoes, I strongly dislike the Exxxx series from Linksys due to reports of lacking wired performance. (Reviews I've read peg them as low as 400mbps sustained)
Full Tilt Boogie: I love the DIR-655! I have had two, but they don't do what I need to do anymore. I am sad in the pants, I loved those routers.
After research, my current shortlist is
ASUS RT-N66U
ASUS RT-AC66U
WD MyNet Central N900 (2TB)
I love the WD concept, especially being able to use it as a WAN-facing storage device and leave my NAS solely connected to my internal network. But it has no ddwrt, which makes me seriously sad in the pants.
Although these are among the top performing routers currently available, the problem I have with them all is anemic wired performance.
I currently can get sustained 900mbps+ with my network set up with just a Cisco switch and Linux PC acting as the brains of the router. The highest I've seen of the above routers is in the 630-650mbps sustained range.
300mbps is a big freaking deal for me, when I transfer hundreds of gigabytes to terabytes daily (Don't ask unless you really want details - it involves databases.)
However, I'm getting very fed up with wireless that can't access the WAN on my Linux router setup. That's my only major beef with it and it's a serious deal killer for me.
#10
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A master's program component that involves a cross-discipline approach working in conjunction with a Geology graduate student developing tools that involve huge databases.
And I'd love 400 MB/s for this, but 120MB/s is about the fastest you can get with gigabit networking (Although I am seriously considering teaming gigabit connections....)
Holy **** Reverant, I love you man. That's going straight on the shortlist.
And I'd love 400 MB/s for this, but 120MB/s is about the fastest you can get with gigabit networking (Although I am seriously considering teaming gigabit connections....)
Holy **** Reverant, I love you man. That's going straight on the shortlist.
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A master's program component that involves a cross-discipline approach working in conjunction with a Geology graduate student developing tools that involve huge databases.
And I'd love 400 MB/s for this, but 120MB/s is about the fastest you can get with gigabit networking (Although I am seriously considering teaming gigabit connections....)
And I'd love 400 MB/s for this, but 120MB/s is about the fastest you can get with gigabit networking (Although I am seriously considering teaming gigabit connections....)
What's the cross-discipline deal. More details. I'm curious.
Yes geological data is um... big. But why are they moving that much data across the network? Are you really ingesting TBs at a time? constantly???
#13
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Basically, it's trying to model volcanic behavior as the simplest explanation, but it involves **** tons of stuff from tectonic plates to earthquakery.
#16
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Only reason I'm even considering a router for one second is because of this. No wireless in my apartment = suuuuuuck.
#19
Biggest gripe I've seen for the E series is them getting too hot- perhaps that's what happened in a few tests and caused them to slow down. I can't say for sure, but performance has been fine for me. I don't do daily terabyte xfers, but I've moved around 500GB of stuff several times with no gripes/issues.
#20
Same here Rev. I've been getting out of the geeking game all together as I get older. Powered off my last BSD firewall a few months ago and now use some POS SOHO Cisco ****. The only server I run today is a Mac Mini. After working all day on computers, the last thing I want to do is work on mine at home. A bonus is if guests don't see a bunch of computer **** at home, they don't think you can fix their broken infected crappy laptop. Wrenching on the car is far more fulfilling.