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by tracker1
3875 days ago
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I've been using Tomato-USB on Asus hardware for several years now... the current Asus firmwares aren't bad though the early ones were pretty horrible. I actually prefer Tomato and similar options, I used openwrt for my home office (routerstation pro) for a few years as well. Being able to run third party software is essential for security updates given that the manufacturers rarely offer more than 1-2 updates and almost never after the first year of a product introduction. Tomato, dd-wrt, openwrt and the like allow me to control my hardware and use it for the life of the hardware, not the year of updates the mfg gives. |
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And are you really going to experiment with building it yourself when you're talking about your Internet router? What do you do if it bricks?
I've been thinking for some time now that the only sensible way forward is a device that runs plain Debian stable, something Raspberry Pi-like, with a USB dongle or two and a plain Ethernet switch. That way, keeping up-to-date is as simple as `apt-get upgrade`. And with a few SD cards, one can easily keep multiple working system images, clone them, and swap between them for testing and upgrades. This situation in which it's even possible to brick a router seems like primitive savagery and madness.
But, not having a DD-WRT/OpenWRT-compatible router, maybe I'm just missing out...?