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by zippergz
3669 days ago
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I guess I'm too used to Cisco and Juniper pricing, but "pricey" is the last thing that comes to mind when I think of Microtik... When you say "good commercial routers" that are cheaper, are you talking about consumer hardware? I'm curious what you prefer. I don't have any Microtik hardware at all, so I don't have any vested interest here - I am just curious what people are liking these days. The vast majority of the consumer networking gear I've tried has been terrible, even with alternate firmware (e.g. OpenWRT doesn't keep crappy Linksys routers from overheating). |
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Previously I had, over the span of 18 months, an ASUS "Dark Knight" (whose 5GHz network slowly faded and then _disappeared_, apparently a known issue), an ASUS RT-AC66U (frequently just choked, requiring a reboot), an a Netgear Nighthawk AC1900 (same, and also issues with unstable wifi).
By contrast, the Mikrotik has been rock stable for the time I've had it (6 months). I also love the WebFig UI. It's a lot more technical than consumer routers, but it's responsive, consistent and doesn't hide any technical details from me. I don't need 90% of the RouterOS features, but I know that if I needed something obscure, I could set it up. You basically get an industrial-quality Linux-based router/switch OS for almost nothing.
(I do like the fine-grained metrics, though. You can get bandwith and connection data not just per interface, but also per NAT rule, for example.)