- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic for Current User
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
Re: Even a free router has better device management
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
Even a free router has better device management
I'm not sure if it's more embarrassing for the netgear team or for us that we bought it.
Also, what do people who paid $1000 for the new Wifi 6 models think? Are you really going to pay that much upfront and then pay a monthly fee for the additional services netgear seems to be building in this direction?
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
Re: Even a free router has better device management
I am involved in installing pretty much every brand and model of networking devices.
I find it so funny that some users with Orbi systems love them and others hate them. I also find the same thing with Linksys Velop, Eero, Nest, Zen, TP-Link, Ubiquiti and more.
I gues that's why there are so many brands.
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
Re: Even a free router has better device management
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
Re: Even a free router has better device management
The truly embarrassing part are the business models ISPs in some markets have on Internet connections - block the common standard ports like 80/TCP, 443/TCP, 21/TCP to prohibit users running some services on their consumer connections ("you have to sign a business contract" - OK this s**t seems to be gone, or we don't here much in the communities about people which can't reach theirs systems from remote by a direct connection), offer carrier grade NAT on IPv4 ("..."), put up unreal monthly limits on data amounts, ... Wonder what comes up next.
Compare to a POTS phone: You can place calls but not receive calls; you can have phone calls only for a limited monthly time, ... unless you buy additional services to have the common ports open, get a public routable IPv4 address, get monthly fair usage data allowances which are reasonable, ... People in your country would send out the lawyers! They probably have.
Of course these ISPs have to provide some more insight on thier CPEs.
Granted ... Netgear's device management (is there any? hard if the lists shown are unreliable...) and hourly/daily/weekly/monthly/other freely configurable time span bandwidth reporting does not even exist.
But here the next "fun" is coming up - especially by the big vendors of mobile and portable devices: For the sake of privacy, Apple and Google are offering - new installations default to this - random MAC addresses with each connection to a network, even the vendor part of the MAC is changing. Not that these vendors break standards (aka. the Internet "laws"), I wish you good luck with the ideas of "client management" and "bandwidth monitoring". Soon we will see hundreds or thousands of "devices" connecting to your wireless networks. DHCP servers will start to run out of resources much faster than it should, ... 8-)))))
For my part, I would like a router being able to check for a correct registered vendor part of the OID and refuse DHCP handing out IP addresses and prohibit any network access to "random" OIDs. Why? Loss of management control. And from that point we can talk about "client management" and "bandwidth monitoring" again my friend.
@mith_it wrote:
Are you really going to pay that much upfront and then pay a monthly fee for the additional services netgear seems to be building in this direction?
Not sure what correlation there is - have you spotted an existing or coming up Netgear paid service which would offer per device bandwidth monitoring?
PS. Yes, the industry (not just Netgear) is sleeping - they are unable to adopt in time.
• What is the difference between WiFi 6 and WiFi 7?
• Yes! WiFi 7 is backwards compatible with other Wifi devices? Learn more