When you have a new 10GB router the most important thing we want to know is if can really route at 10GB speeds, especially at inter VLAN routing, after, yes the software and features will come after, so, what about some iperf3 tests to see how that CPU handle 10GB routing? thanks for the video.
As a consumer, this is pretty much exactly what I need: the ISP already provides a WIFI module that's about as secure as WIFI can get, so I don't need that in the router that'll sit between the ISP's own modem-router (which in ancient ISP tradition has the worst possible UI with the bare minimum of networking functions, with a configuration that you don't own: the ISP can *always* remote-overwrite it with what *they* want your router to do) and my own home + home-office network.
Yo. Any good recommendations for a SFP+ router that supports 10GB or similar that isnt like 500$ ? At those prices I'm wondering if I should just build a cheap Ryzen machine
Look...I don't want to start developing a reputation of being an Ornithological Genocidalist...but seriously...they are prop annoying and I will end them... ..thanks for watching!
Tried to make this a router in lieu of my standard router, but after looking at the firmware, I get really concerned about security, and the UI for port forwarding is really lacking. I could not forward the right ports for my Synology NAS, as it constantly fails. If this could've received OpenWRT support I would've considered it some more.
Why no performance testing? It's disappointing that you cry about the lack of wireless features when they've already covered that base. You failed to understand what the product is meant for.
I disagree on WIFI; I would rather have separate WIFI since WIFI standards change over time. I expect routers to last 6-10 years and generally WIFI standards change more frequently
@@nascomparesany suggestions of a 10gb rj45 router that can be? im switching to 1.8gbps this week and have already received the router but it has 4x 1gb LAN ports an the internet input is the only 2.5gb. im sure 2.5gb and higher speeds will be coming soon, so in order to be prepared i want to just make the home network 10gbe
my provider has a network hub which is the direct fibre into my house that everything else connects to. The wifi 6e router they provided only has 1 2.5G port and the rest are 1G. To get around this I plan to use this router directly from the nework hub and then plug the wifi router into it. my internal cat 6e cables will plug into the 2.5G on the qnap as well. Does this sound like it should work?
Looks like QNap did the same mistake that Fiat did with a car model name years ago. In Swedish the last 4 letters in the name QHora means.. "lady of negotiable affection" in a vulgar language use..