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Forum Discussion
Stuartofmt
Sep 29, 2017Aspirant
Guest WiFIi Enhancements
I moved to Orbi having had a short fling with Google WiFi. I did not like the administration through the cloud which did not work that well (or at all). One thing that was near perfect on Google wa...
peteytesting
Sep 29, 2017Hero
tbh i dont even know how thats possible as you cant be connected to both the normal ssid and guest ssid at the same time as its would cause all sorts of issues with the router seeing the same mac address twice , you may be explaining it differently to what im understanding here however
- aazSep 30, 2017Virtuoso
peteytesting wrote:tbh i dont even know how thats possible as you cant be connected to both the normal ssid and guest ssid at the same time as its would cause all sorts of issues with the router seeing the same mac address twice , you may be explaining it differently to what im understanding here however
Pretty sure that last part...
He did not say that the Sono's would be connected to both guest and regular WiFi only that guests could use the Sonos that is on his regular network. It's not a common guest Wifi feature but I could see the uses for it. Instead of exposing your devices publickly, it's like a DMZ for guest access.
- st_shawSep 30, 2017Master
peteytesting wrote:tbh i dont even know how thats possible as you cant be connected to both the normal ssid and guest ssid at the same time as its would cause all sorts of issues with the router seeing the same mac address twice , you may be explaining it differently to what im understanding here however
What the OP described is easily accomplished on other routers with VLANs and firewall rules. You put the regular and guest networks on separate VLANs and use firewall rules to allow guest access to certain devices.
- peteytestingSep 30, 2017Hero
we arnt talking about vlans here , we are talking about wifi connectivity and you cant join 2 ssid's at once
- st_shawSep 30, 2017Master
peteytesting wrote:we arnt talking about vlans here , we are talking about wifi connectivity and you cant join 2 ssid's at once
The OP described how Google WiFI allows device-level access control on the guest network. You said you didn't know how it was possible. I explained one way it could be implemented within Google WiFI--by using VLANs.
You seem to be assuming the Google behavior requires one device to join two SSIDs at once. Obviously that's not required, because as you pointed out, one device cannot join two SSIDs at once.