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Crystal ball - aka which router is likely gonna make it for a while

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And then for Merlin to work his magic, exactly.
That will be the next network evolution around here: x86 - pfsense - managed PoE switches - PoE APs

It's a bit sad in a way. I like Asus routers, it was always very dependable solution for me and if you saw how much I'm throwing at the poor old AC88U, you'd think I'm crazy. But it just ticks along without breaking a sweat. Well sometimes looking at the temperatures that's maybe a stretch, but it just works.

And I really value and admire all the work that goes into Merlin's FW and all the oddons around it. It just solved so many problems for me over the years. The thing is though - a lot of these problems should not exist in the first place.

These days a lot is different. If you want easy networking, you can buy whole set of UniFi hw and you're set. Yes, even that has limitations, but setting it all up is frankly piece of...easy.

If you want more flexibility, performance, tinkering, control - pfSense runs on almost anything. Yes the GUI might be a little bit dated, but you can quite easily do quite a lot of magic there. I'm one of these people that are intimidated by iptables. Despite of being able to set some basic stuff in there, I'm always anxious I'll break something or allow too much. In pfSense - you can dig deep, but you don't have to. It all kinda makes sense there right away. And you don't even need physical devices to run the show.

Same with the switches and routers - Microtik for example does some really great stuff for quite unbelievable prices - managed sub £100 switches, decent routers for a couple. 10Gbit is almost consumer level these days. PoE everywhere to your heart's content. You want 100Gbit fibre? You've got it. CRS504-4XQ-IN for barely £800. I mean 🤯

It quickly comes to a place where you can have pretty decent setup covering all the basis for not much more than a BE98 Pro would cost. Most of it will run for a decade easily. And you can replace bit by bit what you need.

Yep, it's a bit sad really. Progress. If only Asus thrown all the useless gamer stuff out of the window and started concentrating on the real networking 🤷🏻‍♂️
 
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Same with the switches and routers - Microtik for example does some really great stuff for quite unbelievable prices - managed sub £100 switches, decent routers for a couple. 10Gbit is almost consumer level these days. PoE everywhere to your heart's content. You want 100Gbit fibre? You've got it. CRS504-4XQ-IN for barely £800. I mean 🤯
2.5Gbit stuff is. and 10Gbit stuff isn't that far behind: https://mikrotik.com/product/crs304_4xg_in

we're getting to the point that this stuff is required infrastructure for homes and becomes a selling feature.
 
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If only Asus thrown all the useless gamer stuff out of the window

I'm pretty sure there are people buying ROG Rapture Gaming Ethernet cables from Asus. It's all about money. Different target market.
 
I'm pretty sure there are people buying ROG Rapture Gaming Ethernet cables from Asus. It's all about money. Different target market.
Wait, what? You mean solid gold cable core with vacuum insulated enclosure and triple ruthenium enriched alloy shielding doesn't decrease latency by 0.99ms? Shocking! 😂
 
this is getting as bad as the stereo crap back in the day

The crap is gone digital now. Here is one audiophile Ethernet cable for you:

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It smoothens the rough edges of ones and zeroes for an unheard-of music experience. 🎶
 
The crap is gone digital now. Here is one audiophile Ethernet cable for you:

View attachment 62005

It smoothens the rough edges of ones and zeroes for an unheard-of music experience. 🎶
And I'm sure people buy it to smooth out those rough edged1's and 0's , it never ends
 
I worked in media production for many years and I always had a good laugh at people buying crazy priced cables with questionable claims of audio/video superiority because they had no idea what kind of wire all that sound/video went through in the studio long before it got to them. In the analog days we used standard off the shelf copper audio cables and 8251video cables. You cant get any more picture or sound out of a recording that what we already put into it. If a multimillion dollar studio is built using 12 cent per foot cable that kind of tells you all you need to know.
 
You may want to take a look at OpenWrt. GL.iNet GL-MT6000 is currently £103 on Amazon UK, £113 - £10 coupon. It runs OpenWrt based firmware and can run vanilla OpenWrt. Many packages available. Similar to your AX88U Pro hardware.
A great router but still with teething problems via a vis OpenWrt and the Mediatek drivers. Also, the GL.iNet skin, while very capable and useful, only handles one VPN connection at a time, so there isn't anything like VPN Director or 10 possible clients and three servers.
 
BE98 Pro for the win. It has the 6ghz channels. But it's really big. Almost full size desktop computer. Also the 2.5gig and 10gig is nice.
 
BE98 Pro for the win.

Sorry, but for this price I would rather build Ubiquiti system with Cloud Gateway Max and 2x U7 Pro access points. It's about $600 along with 2x PoE+ injectors. The gateway has 2.5GbE ports, the access points have 2.5GbE ports, can do IDS/IPS (Suricata) at 1.5Gbps WAN speed and the software is way more polished with actually working VLAN features. Why paying the same money for some gaming toy and beta testing Asuswrt for few years after? Do you think 2x access points won't have better coverage area and won't serve more clients than single AIO router?
 

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