flyingcheesehead
Touchdown! Greaser!
ok, so in reader's digest layman's terms
how is this mesh / UniFi stuff different than a wifi router and hardwired access points?
So for clarification - UniFi is a brand, sold by Ubiquiti Networks. Mesh is a technology.
The "reader's digest layman's" explanation of mesh would be that it's multiple "base stations" (aka WAPs) that work together via wireless connection in addition to providing a wireless connection to clients, whereas the hardwired access points can communicate via the wires.
My house was wired with cat5 to almost every room and everything home runs back to a closet upstairs.
Wow. If you ever find the person who decided to do that, thank them. If my house was pre-wired with Cat5, this would be a much easier process for me!
The unfortunate thing is that my easy choices for cable modem and router placement are a bit limited. None really put the router in a central spot to cover the whole house.
so I installed a couple netgear wifi access points.
They work ok, and are more or less seamless.... I do get a bit of a hiccup occasionally when moving from one area to another, but mostly that's not really an issue. I have always questioned though if I really have them optimized as good as they could be.... just intuitively seems like the overlap areas could be bad
So here's why the Ubiquiti equipment consistently gets high marks - Fantastic software to go with their excellent hardware. One of the things you can do with their access points (at least the ones I use) is a bandwidth/conflict analysis for all of the different radio frequencies/channels that they can use, so that the right channels can be chosen to maximize throughput. It's pretty cool.
You should have seen the look on my Electrician's face when I asked him to run 2 x 240V/50A cables to the outside front of my house for the sole purpose of running my Christmas Lights...
He actually refused to do it until I proved to him that my power supplies can run on 240V .
That seems high, I had a singular cable done last year. 50 ft CAT6A solid cable & RJ45 was $20. Install was 90 minutes at $125/hour via the attic. He terminated it with RJ45 on the ceiling (AP then fits over it), I terminated it on the patch panel side. So just over $200 for a 50ft Ethernet cable installed. Obviously running multiple cables at the same time is cheaper.
I suppose high quality speaker cable in itself is far more expensive than CAT6A though.
So you paid $4.15/foot total, but the "via the attic" part isn't in closed walls. Sounds about right to me...
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