jgreco
Resident Grinch
- Joined
- May 29, 2011
- Messages
- 18,680
C'mon you're an engineer right?
I thought he was a fancy Python reply script.
C'mon you're an engineer right?
I'd like to think my sense of humor cannot be captured by a simple Python script.I thought he was a fancy Python reply script.
Sounds like a great project idea to suggest to him. Someone should contact him. Based on his previous videos I'm sure a vendor will donate some wickedly expensive network kit for a jury-rigged water-cooling experiment.I'd like to think my sense of humor cannot be captured by a simple Python script.
As for the "just don't use fans" solution: Be careful. Someone is bound to mistake that for serious advice and we might get a Linus Tech Tips episode out of it...
On second thought, don't be careful.
All that water is going to mess with the radios' performance... Cue the inevitable "huh, my WiFi sucks now, but the router is rock-solid now that it doesn't overheat".Sounds like a great project idea to suggest to him. Someone should contact him. Based on his previous videos I'm sure a vendor will donate some wickedly expensive network kit for a jury-rigged water-cooling experiment.
http://www.overclockers.com/forums/album.php?albumid=47
All that water is going to mess with the radios' performance... Cue the inevitable "huh, my WiFi sucks now, but the router is rock-solid now that it doesn't overheat".
I find it silly that "My router's CPU is operating perilously close to its maximum junction temperature" is a statement that applies to many cases, these days. When Asus decided to really invest in the market a couple of years back (with products like the RT-N66U), they literally reused PSU models originally meant for netbooks.
Average Joe is going to stick with "Oooooh... So many antennas, and they're so big!".The obvious solution would be to position your router away from your access points.
Oh. Poor sorry bastards. They can't do that because they're using those all-in-one consumer grade pieces of $#!+ that are commonly mis-referred to as "routers."
Mostly inexcusable these days. You can put a decent edge router/NAT gateway in the form of something like a Ubiquiti EdgeRouter PoE, which (if you get the 48V supply) will actually power several commercial grade access points like the Ubiquiti Unifi AP AC Pro, and then a low cost high flexibility switch like the Netgear Prosafe GS108Tv2. This stuff gives you an uncompromising network made out of high quality hardware, including the ability to install multiple access points that act as a single wireless system.
That said, enterprise-grade APs are overkill for most people. Just not shoving VPN, torrent, NAS and god knows what else duties onto a puny ARM (for the recent high performance stuff)/MIPS (mostly older stuff)/ARC (literally descended from the SNES SuperFX add-on chip!) running Linux would go a long way towards reasonable territory.
I've noticed that their pricing seems pretty damn awesome and I've been meaning to look into their product range.Honestly, I'm from back in the day when I was quite happy to have a 20MHz 68020 based UNIX system with 4MB of RAM because it represented a hell of an upgrade from the previous 6MHz 68000 with 512KB.
The fact that I can get a dual core 880MHz 5 port router box with 256MB RAM and 256MB flash for $49 today absolutely amazes me. Today's overkill becomes tomorrow's standard.
I've noticed that their pricing seems pretty damn awesome and I've been meaning to look into their product range.
The non-standard PoE bugs me a bit, but I wouldn't be able to use it over fiber anyway.
The only issue I have with Ubiquiti is the near-total lack of support. There's nobody I can call, email, chat, or even put in a ticket on a web form (other than for an RMA). There is a forum (which I haven't really investigated), but I don't really consider a forum as a proper official support tool for a paying customer. Though when my UniFi AP bricked, I was able to get an RMA for it, and they turned that around pretty quickly.
The only issue I have with Ubiquiti is the near-total lack of support. There's nobody I can call, email, chat, or even put in a ticket on a web form (other than for an RMA).
(May or may not have jury rigged a 120mm fan to replace three loud 60mm fans in his procurve 2824 on the rack)