There is none in consumer wireless mesh.
So mainstream products that market themselves such as bt wholehome and netgear etc are nonsense?
fair enough, so for home use small family etc they do the job and do it well but large scale then they will probably be picked apart"Amazing" is not a performance measurement.
They work to extend WiFi. Not true mesh system though.
fair enough, so for home use small family etc they do the job
That's an awfully broad statement, if we're being generous; perhaps even incorrect, if we can agree on what "redundancy" means.Mesh has redundancy. There is none in consumer wireless mesh.
Gotcha. You're inference is based on a non multi-point/multi-path setup, or at least one that isn't explicitly setup that way. But whose to say that's the case every time? What about a user who installs, say, a three-pack of Eero Pro's, even one at a time in serial, and, if given the right inter-node proximity, they automatically form a 3-node, multi-point/multi-path triangle (which they can and will do). What then? The above statement simply doesn't hold true for that case, nor as a generalization.The problem with "wireless mesh" is it is not installed in a manner to be used as a redundant system [... it's] installed in a serial fashion [...] which forces them to run that way in a non-mesh way
Even if the gear is redundancy-enabled to begin with? Like, in my Eero example above? Again, how so?You would need to buy twice as many wireless devices for starters to add redundancy.
"OSPF-like" was an analogy to something that could calculate path cost, which happens to be one facet of good multi-point mesh. I think you misinterpreted, and I probably should have left that reference out. Apologies for the confusion.As far as being like OSPF or any routing protocol like you are totally off base in my way of thinking and you are not understanding routing protocols and how they work. I have never used this hardware you are referring to but I understand routing protocols. This can be easily proven by using traceroute. IF you don't see a hope for each wireless device in the path then it is not running as a routing protocol.
Interesting. My replies aren't meant to be controversial, just more so for clarity/truth:
Gotcha. You're inference is based on a non multi-point/multi-path setup, or at least one that isn't explicitly setup that way. But whose to say that's the case every time? What about a user who installs, say, a three-pack of Eero Pro's, even one at a time in serial, and, if given the right inter-node proximity, they automatically form a 3-node, multi-point/multi-path triangle (which they can and will do). What then? The above statement simply doesn't hold true for that case, nor as a generalization.Even if the gear is redundancy-enabled to begin with? Like, in my Eero example above? Again, how so?"OSPF-like" was an analogy to something that could calculate path cost, which happens to be one facet of good multi-point mesh. I think you misinterpreted, and I probably should have left that reference out. Apologies for the confusion.
Not meaning to be a thorn or too much of a literal geek (sorry!), and you certainly don't owe any answers to my reverse questioning. It's just some of your generalizations come off as a bit incoherent, even outright wrong. Then again, none of us are perfect (I'm far from it), and I've certainly hit "Post" after a few too many before, much to my own humbling.
Anyways, it's all good. I get that the marketing jargon is annoying when it mis-represents a lot of products' true functionality (or lack thereof) in the vast majority of cases, this case certainly being one.
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