in UK / EUROPE that is the case. Because the average house costs the whole family people worth of organs and is small enough to house the whole family like its crowded train ride. Its not with bad intentions. You see, the English did this so they could ease communication with inside the house. They no longer need to shout WTF from the top of their lungs. Because the houses are small everyone will hear you say with a normal voice "I beg your pardon?!" which is much scarier.
@@rohanofelvenpower5566 On the other hand, European houses are more likely to be multi floor or made of reinforced concrete which blocks (especially 5GHz) signals much more than the materials found in most American houses would. Even when I lived in small commie apartment I had issues with signal coverage with one AP.
@@snap_oversteer Yeah, I can confirm this! We have a 3 floor house, and a walls made from brick, the floors from concrete... I have 2 Unifi AP-s (one indoor, one outdoor) and when I use 5G on my phone, I have weak connectivity from both APs, even one of them are 2 meters from me, but I have two walls on that 2 meters...
It's truly amazing how you manage to point out every important aspect of the subjects you dive in to, time and time again. I hope you realize how helpful this is, perhaps intentionally, but in any way of good use. So, thank you Mr. Plummer!
Yep, I've got UniFi gear too and my main point of buyers remorse has been the unconventional way they handle subnetting and VLANs A guide on the Ubiquity way to do this would be superb!
As a farmer, mechanic, and tech person with some programming experience I love your channel! ALL your videos interest me from the lessons in computer history(got my first pc in '93), programming, your garage, your truck and light mods, and showing us how your home network is setup. It's only slightly out of reach for most but gives us a glimpse into what we may be using eventually or parts we may want to copy ourselves. Just keep showing us around and how you do things as it all contains very valuable lessons/information. Even though I fully grasp most everything you've discussed I still feel I've learned something by the end. As mentioned, you explain things along with all the hiccups you encountered doing it yourself. This is how I try to explain things to others but it is underappreciated in most cases and seems like a waste of my breathe at times. I appreciate the way you do it. It feels like accelerated learning. Have a good one!
Great video! A couple of clarifications: Band Steering usually works by ignoring Probe Requests in 2.4 GHz. When a client sends Probe Requests in 2.4 GHz, the infrastructure will ignore them X amount of times, causing most clients to only see the 5 GHz APs. It works... but can cause devices in 2.4 GHz to take longer to associate. Fast Roaming works by speeding up authentication when a client roams. Basically, it skips a number of steps in the association/authentication process. As a result, it's not actually seamless, but it is fast enough that the user typically won't notice, or the interruption in their application will be minimal. Sweet network setup!
Hi Dave, Another old-timer Bob here. I really like listening to old time tech in your channel. Before I forget, let me put in a plug for more vlan coverage. I go back to IBM 360 assembler and customized worldwide networking with Pan Am and Avis in the late '60s and early '70s. I jumped on the mini and micro train while I continued to work with mainframes in the '80s and beyond. I loved windows when it came out, but I grew cold to it after 7. I'm retired now and I live in Linux. I usually keep a single modern windows machine to run a few windows apps reliably. Thanks for your channel.
Dave, my APs have been fighting me for the last 4 days making my family crazy. thank you again for being punctual on solving my issues that I didn't even realize you knew I was having. Informative and useful as always. and yes, a video on VLANs would be greatly appreciated.
My UDM Pro died after 2 years of service right after attempting the latest UnifiOS update. I had a bad feeling about it and waited a while till finally decided to update. It no longer booted, thankfully I still had my old Linksys router which had 8 ethernet ports and I was able to have a functional network while I RMAd my unit. Really enjoyed your video thanks for sharing.
Thanks again Dave. I am a retired IT manager but have been out of the game for so long that I feel literally left behind with today's technology. I actually retired prior to the AdVent of Wi-Fi becoming the standard that it is today. (back in the day everything was hard lined many hours at a punch down block LOL) Your videos are like an advanced refresher course . I enjoy every one of them and to be quite honest they bring back so many memories to those early network/PC days . absolutely, I think you should do a VLAN follow-up.
I started down this rabbit hole with UniFi , a udm pro and the smallest ap they had. Now it’s evolved to 15 G4 bullets 2 48 port pro switches a 24 port and a 16 port pro units and a unvr. I wouldn’t say I have any regrets but I wanna do more. Thank you for your awesome content I found your channel a little over a year ago and I’ve enjoyed it immensely!!
Unifi gear is addictive... I hear you. It isn't exactly cheap (nor the most expensive) & Ubiquiti are not perfect by any means, but you can end up with a pretty amazing setup.
Rabbit hole indeed.. I went for the sbc controller route. Close to the same functionality but at a fraction of the cost. sbc router with openWRT that controls the network, a nanopi neo3 that runs the unifi control interface and ubiquitis accesspoints (dumb ap). :)
Dave, I greatly appreciate your hard work on making this channel and I would definitely appreciate a video dedicated to VLAN explanation, implementation, and descriptions of use cases.
VLANs are used to create "mini-networks". You use them to separate users and devices into groups. For example, the typical setup are VLANs for a management network (used to literally manage the network and nothing more, like your hardware), your main network for your normal users, an IoT network for non-network hardware devices, and a security camera network. I also have a separate work network that I only have my employer's devices on to separate them from the rest of my network. The I have multiple Wifi networks for wireless devices that need access to those VLANs. There are lots of tutorials on UA-cam for this stuff, including setup, for a UniFi system. But hopefully this can get you started.
A few years ago, my son talked me into buying a brand of router I'd never heard of. Ubiquity makes a brand called Amplifi. I bought the Amplifi router and it's been bullet proof since. Even automatically downloads firmware updates, slick mesh points and it just works. Hat's off to Ubiquiti for solid hardware
Great video! I completely agree about hardwiring APs. In fact, when working ISP tech support I always advised people to hardwire any non-portable devices to alleviate them off their wireless bandwidth, especially in apartments or densely populated areas. It’s amazing how much people rely on Wi-Fi these days, yet they take so little if any time at all to understand it.
OMG that house! Very nice, Dave. I use UniFi as well. I had to run cat6 in my house, man that was a job. I also used the Ubiquiti in wall access points too. So every room in the house has it's own hard-wired ethernet and WiFI access points. Next up is setting up a media server so I can stop consuming so much data from the outside world.
I too use Unifi. I started with the UDM and once I saw how good it was, I immediately upgraded to the UDM Pro and one AP. Now I have four WiFi 6e APs and three 10G switches. All of my APs are hard wired with meshing turned off. Absolutley love Unifi! But the same for me, it has been almost 2 years now so I also have the original UDM Pro with a 1TB WD Blue SSD and three G4 Pro camera. 77 devices, lol on four separate networks and four separate SSIDs with one being IoT only.
I solved my Wifi "issues" (three WAPs, three SSIDs) in 2018 with an Orbi RBK50 and one satellite (RBR50). Set it and forget it. 70-80% signal strength at 500Mbps. One SSID. Happy (quiet) family, Happy Dad!
Flex all you want Dave, you deserve it, and your giving back, Thank You! People like you give me something to keep living and to strive for, never give up, never surrender! 😃
VLANs are an oft misunderstood concept. I really struggled with it when I was trying to get my head around it for my home network and one thing I found is that the ease of deployment seems to be variable between switch vendors. I'm giving a talk on VLANs and Switchdev next week :)
This is great Dave. I light up about 6 acres with 3 houses the same equipment. I have the SE version of the router BUT it’s important that folks understand that all the non SFP+ ports share the same 1gb controller. So I have the SE router connected to fiber to 3 pro 10G switches. Anyhow, thanks for the video.
Dave, great minds think alike. I'm a fan of the Ubiquiti solution as well. I'm just starting the process of setting up an IOT network and would love to hear what you have had luck doing. I think the specific trickier points to set up are going to be items like... how to Cast from a phone on main network to Roku on IOT network. I'm sure the firewall rules and which rules for typical items are going to be the trickiest part of this!
@brianfritz575, simple, your phone is an IOT device, put it on the IOT network, or if you prefer to keep it on your main network, just have it join the IOT one when you cast.
Off course Dave, do the VLAN video. From explaining the technology, packet management and how routing is done, to use cases and the angry dad's recommended brand of choice.
Might be one of the few times in my life that I can truly say I completely relate to Dave on something. I believe almost every Dad knows this struggle.
Thank you. Yes please, VLan Videos would be great. Much needed. Along with the why, when how and alternatives and do’s and dont’s but please always discuss the security side to do things and offer an alternative with minimal compromise etc. Thank you for your contributions and helpfulness. Great channel.
Dave I would love to see an episode about vlans. I was trying to deploy a network at my office trying to use vlans to separate printer and server access to certain clients only. While also offering a guest network, and I still don't understand what to do or how to implement it today. Most forums speak about it like we should be born knowing what a VLAN is. I would love to see an episode with your breakdown on it. As always thank you for your videos Dave!
Those Unifi wap's and their entire ecosystem is amazing. They do such a good job at not making it completely proprietary and at the same time making it all work together smoothly. The PoE options are also a big plus.
I've been running Unifi gear in my sprawling house (not as large or nice as Dave's though!) since 2018. I can vouch for everything that he has said here. There's also a lot more to it that he hasn't (yet?) covered. In depth VLAN for example.
Great Video Dave, I wish I saw this 6 years ago when I had the exact same issues. I was lucky and stumbled on the Unifi access points, I installed 3 of the long range units and haven't had a single issue since then.
Nice tips given here, Dave. For optimal performance, signal level should be kept above -67dBm. WiFiman is a good app to track wifi signal for iPhone+Android. In high density scenarios, where your APs coverage significantly overlap, try to reduce the transmit power to a point where you're keeping good signal and performance. For the record, some Wi-Fi devices have either poor antenna design, or limited transmit power. Reducing transmit power will reduce the cases where your devices still indicate 3 bars of signal and yet gets poor performance. Remember the rule: "WiFi works best when APs whisper and stations shout." Last thing: making your AP transmitting above 100mW / 20dBm is futile, as a wide range of devices won't be able to send data beyond that power level. Hardcore advices (don't bother if this doesn't mean anything to you): - Set DTIM to 3 to optimize power consumption on mobile devices. - Turn on Multicast optimization, especially if you're using your carrier's IPTV service (country/service specific). - For 2.4GHz, disable 802.11b rates if all your devices support at least 802.11g. - Enable 802.11d (world mode) and set your country code (especially if you welcome people from foreign places, or if you live in Europe, this will make the device adjust to your local regulations). - Set your APs to ignore any signal below -83dBm on 2.4GHz. - Enable UNII-II channels and DFS if you don't live near an airport or a weather radar (country specific, check local regulations). There's a lot more to say, but this comment is already getting too long.
I have a UDM Pro as well, with 5 APs, 4 in the house and 1 in the sheshed. I love the system. Gotta add one more AP where I have a small deadzone in the most critical usage place, the bath room.
As I watch this I realize just how different youtube content creators are as many take a lot of their audiences knowledge for granted. I have watched so much content on setting up a home network, never mind WIFI, and in many cases am still left with often times basic questions. I have been researching the Ubiquiti gear for months now, and even their own site is lacking. This is a great video on home networking in general. Thank you!! Also I would never have considered the Dream Machine SE, but now that you explain how it fits into the entire ecosystem it seems a no brainer. Now with WIFI 7 just around the corner I have to decide whether I want to invest money into WIFI 6, or just wait. I'm hoping that Ubiquiti's lack of emphasis on 6E is just them eagerly working away at the real replacement for WIFI 6. Fingers crossed. Tip for other viewers, you can never ever run too much ethernet cable. I wish I would have pulled three times the cable I did during my most recent remodel. As you elude to Dave, if you have a device that is stationary (eg. attached to a wall, or sitting on a desk) then try to hardwire it with ethernet cable. If it has an ethernet port then try and fill it. I'm trying to hardwire all of my TV's, which means I am going to have to fish more cable, but it is what it is. Thumbs up again for a great video.
For 99% of cases a single ethernet cable will be sufficient to provide full bandwidth for multiple devices. Just add a small switch. Ubiquiti makes them. Run one ethernet, attach to the small switch, then attach your devices to the switch. I have this throughout my house. TV, Xbox, AVR, etc. all attached to a small UniFi switch that is actually powered by POE. Works perfectly. It makes no sense to run 5 ethernet runs. You'll never own any devices that consume that much bandwidth. A 4K Netflix stream only uses 15Mbps. A AAA title Xbox download is can max out a 1GB ISP connection, but you're not doing that often. A single Cat6 will easily do 10Gbps. So worst case you add a 10Gbps switch, but that won't be applicable except in high nerd situations.
Great video Dave, I'd love to see a VLAN video. I'm a networking expert but it's always enlightening to see how other people implement VLAN's unique to their own environments.
Just a head's up: VLANs alone do not limit access across VLANs. A device on one VLAN could communicate with equipment on another VLAN via any device permitted to forward packets. The exception is guest networks, which have firewalling in place by default to isolate devices connecting to that network. On your non-guest VLANs, you should consider what you need & want, then configure the firewall accordingly. Another tip: Produce QR codes and flash NFC tags with the connection information for your guest network, then visitors can connect to that network without typing in a PSK and you don't need to leave the guest network SSID open.
Fantastic video Dave! After about a year of debating on which solution to go with, I finally bit the bullet and ordered the Dream machine SE, a switch, and two of Unifi access points. It all arrives tomorrow, so glad to see you post this. As always, your content is both informative and entertaining.. Thank you!
There is one basic rule I try to follow: “If it doesn’t have to move around, WIRE IT.” This of course only applies to devices that actually have an Ethernet port (and the ability to have an Ethernet cable run to it), but the idea is to absolutely minimize the number of devices that use Wi-Fi to only those that absolutely need it, so the ones that are using it have far less frequency congestion to contend with. That principle alone can make a huge difference.
As someone who has just recently upgraded their internet connection and subsequently discovered that my internet is now faster than my home network, I now find myself researching how to up my game on my home network strategy. Great video and a vote from me for a followup VLAN video.
Thanks Dave, great video. I have also been using Ubiquiti gear in my home. I had been running the Ubiquiti Console on a Raspberry pi with good results. But I just took the plunge into their camera offerings. That required that I replace the Pi with a device where I could run the Protect software. So now I have a Cloud Key Gen 2 +. My question: On which vlan do you run printers? And which network do you put the SmartTV on? Those need connectivity to family computers and phones. So I've been putting them on the Main VLAN. If you do a VLAN video, could you address those questions?
You would normally put the printer and TV on an IoT VLAN. Then you setup a firewall rule that lets devices on your "main" VLAN initiate communication with devices on your IoT VLAN, but your IoT stuff can't initiate communication with your main network devices. Obviously it depends on your use case and you can an get very complex if needed. But that's the general idea.
@@everyhandletaken This is the problem with human nature in general. When we're given things without having to earn them, we feel entitled that these things are somehow 'owed to us'.
You don't have to spend a lot on unifi. One U6 PRO is $120 to $160. If that is all the coverage you need, that is all you need to start. Just Like Dave said over time you can add to that as funds and needs develop.
I've been using a Unifi AP since about 2019, and now have 3 around the house. When I rebuilt my network (then still in an apartment) around 2014, I used a Ubiquiti Edgemax router, but didn't go with a Unifi AP initially. Since I only needed one, I didn't want a system that required a controller, and at that time they only used a special passive 24V PoE mode. So I went through two different brands of APs for a while, which each had various problems (mostly related to either VLANs, IPv6, or RADIUS). Eventually I decided just to get a Unifi after they switched to standard 802.3af, and by that time I had a VM server set up for other applications I could run the controller on. They've definitely figured out how to dominate the market for small installations that need more professional features. I think the key was pricing the entry level APs around $100 and not requiring dedicated hardware or software licensing for the controller.
I would like to hear more about your Unifi VLAN configuration. In my experience so far, it's easy to partition the network into VLANs, but unifi doesn't want to step on toes and lets traffic flow between them freely. I'm curious what changes you made in order to lock these down, ESPECIALLY for an IoT VLAN, which never seems to stop growing (at least in my experience!)
the vlans in unifi wants to have a unifi security gateway to work properly (which the dream machine provides, but you can get a security gateway as its own device) but it is possible to use them in other ways if you have a proper enterprise router or firewall.
Great video on the pains of "dad the wifi is down" which any parent has heard. A video on VLANs would be nice. I am in the process of doing a ESP32 LED display for the house based on your videos. Thanks
Did you consider blurring your home ip? There will always people that like to mess with people. Also, when you pull up your ip, a webserver lists your dyndns address so it's even easier to follow after 😅Just something to consider.
Nice and classic solution. The disadvantage is the binding with this vendor. We have done quite a few builds with a classic other solution. This solution is Mikrotik for core router and ubiquiti for wifi system, it is this hybrid implementation that behaves extremely well.
Thanks for posting this so it's easy to understand. I've got my network setup the same way, but have struggled to explain to others how I've got it configured. I'm a foster parent to teenagers so I try my best to keep internet usage safe including making specific wifi networks that shut off at 10:00 to encourage kids to put devices down and go to bed. I've been trying to figure out a good way to document my setup to share with other foster families but haven't taken the time to do so. I'll be sharing this with others, thanks
Here in India, Unifi stuff is about ten times as expensive as my budget allows. I have $12-20 Mi routers running OpenWRT as access points with a wired gigabit backhaul. For management I have an old broken laptop running as a server. Happy with the setup so far.
I love the Ubiquiti gear, but their access points are like a gateway drug. Once you get one running you start combing the Unifi site asking yourself, "How can I incorporate that device into my network?" Thanks for sharing your network. I am jealous of the breadth of devices you've been able to connect.
Dave, my setup almost mirrors what you explained. I started with the Linksys 54wrt and switched to unifi about 10 years ago. We use the Cisco wireless controller (WLC) at work and was pleasantly surprised at how the unifi controller seamlessly managed the network without much fuss. No dedicated H/W and most settings out of the box just work. I have since recommended/setup the unifi solution for friends and family and almost never receive the "support calls" usually disguised dinner invitation to fix stuff. The VLAN setup is pretty straightforward no CLI or in depth knowledge required - you might want to explain that in a future video.
Love the channel. I'm glad you have grown so much. Been watching for a while now. Definitely would love to see a video on VLANs, even though I already understand them.
Just got the Orbi….top of the line for 600 bucks at Costco. Like you 2 houses on 2 acres. Seemless Wifi. Absolute best purchase EVER. Can’t say enough and after I bought it found out they had Wi-Fi 7 available. Plug and play. Crestron…that’s a flex.
VLAN sounds like a great video idea! I'd love to be able to strategically expose some internal devices on the net to more than one VLAN, so I can keep a super secure on for just my stuff and stick anyone else on a passworded, but still sandboxed one, while they could still access some internal servers or other stuff.
I'd like to hear more about your Crestron home automation. My experience with Crestron (and AMX) is that only technicians who would for a certified Crestron installers have the tools to configure and maintain the systems. That's definitely a no-go for someone like me who wants to be able to configure a home automation system myself.
yep... I started with two linksys routers.... then went to three d-link, then once I upgraded to unifi I installed 4 access points around my house... problem solved. I upgraded my network with unifi switches and router to the USG pro 4. Its been flawless and with ubiquity pushing regular updates and patches with new features and fixes I feel I got my money worth. Unifi controller runs on a pi4 in the rack... really a slick system overall.
I would definitely be interested in a video on VLANs. Also, thanks so much for the fantastic video explaining the Unifi ecosystem, now I just need to come up with the money and I'm ready to take the plunge.
My house is a bit smaller but I am using five Unifi access points. I'm using slightly older (3) UAP-AC-Pro and (2) UAP-nanoHD access points. All of my APs have a 1Gbps PoE network connection. I could easily get away with less but bandwidth and reliability may be hampered. My APs can see nearly 500 other SSIDs in the neighborhood. My APs monitor channels and can de-power the transmission power to limit their range automatically. I have some variability throughout my property but in doing speed tests, the weakest area of my property provides at least 200 Mbps up and down, where most is around 400 Mbps up and down. I do my speed tests using both publicly available speed tests as well as my own speed test server running LibreSpeed. For devices that use WiFi, that should be plenty of bandwidth. If you need better bandwidth, I have plenty of network jacks throughout the house. I run my Unifi controller (UniFi Network Application) on a Ubuntu 22.04.2 VM. Like Dave, I have separate VLANs for my personal devices, IoT devices, and guests. I also include a VLAN for WiFi purposes for cameras. My camera network though has no direct access to the Internet, as I don't want them to report home to their manufacturer. The network video recorder has access to the camera network as well as another network. I have other wired VLANs for different web services operating on VMs. I don't use Ubiquiti's router though, I instead use pfSense Plus. Just after you enter my house, I have a picture frame that contains two custom-stylized QR codes. One directs your smartphone to connect with my guest VLAN and the other to run a speedtest with one of my LibreSpeed test servers. For those with devices without cameras, I also have the SSID and passphrase needed to gain access to my guest VLAN, as well as the URL for my speed test server.
I had to go with 2 perm access points, and 1 temp one, just for the smoker. The trick was to use the same SSID and put everything on a different channel. No issues.
Yes, definitely interested in the VLAN video. I don't have that dream networked home you have but I want to have my server/NAS, cables for all devices, and a better internet connection, but most importantly, make my network better managed than it is now.
Ubiquiti stuff is addictive, too... you get used to being able to manage (and more importantly, diagnose) network issues. Also, I would enjoy a video about configuring VLANs.
"My wife has an ipad, macbook, and iphone" sheeeeeesh that one hurt lmao. I would think of all people your one of the most well equipped to make a compelling case against such discrepancies. Regardless i appreciate all you do to document early computing breakthroughs
I'm glad I'm not alone with my wifi woes. I just bought some TP Link equipment but haven't had a chance to try it out Love how great your videos are. I think I understand VLANs but I'm sure you have lots to teach me.
Man you hit a nerve on this one! we had the same issues only we went TP Link and omada controller due to cost but works like a charm! also we used Ubiquity Light Beams to make a connection between our PFSense router and another property 1000ft away. on the other property I built a solar powered job box and attached a pole with an outdoor wifi and the light beam on the property and used golf cart batteries to power it all. No power on my other property... anyway it all worked out and now we have wifi all over our mountain.
Your mention of do we want a video on vlans is a Yes Please. I’m an IT generalist working my day job but would like to learn more about the ins and outs of vlans for work and home use. That would be great if you can swing it, thanks!
Dave, Much respect for the channel, just my kind of content. also much respect for your contributions to Windows OS. i also love ubiquiti gear and have a hardwired network in my house. i fully understand the pain of my children saying dad my youtube kids is offline again, they have no idea what we grew up with!! funniest part for me is when the network or isp goes down and its just my fault. Kids read a book of play a game on the floor not watch a screen. I wish i could get them off the instant gratification, but they are only 7 & 10. Rant over, much respect for task manager it has been a constant help for years of windows troubleshooting amongst other things.
Great Video. I would love to see more info on setting up Vlans for a home with IoT devices and possibly how to block internet access for the IoT devices that don't need to call home. Would be helpful for many people setting up smart homes (as I have been with Home Assistant for the past few months)
Linksys WRT54G! I used the 'S' variant for many years. I was so surprised when just switching to the vanilla 2.4/5-GHz router from Spectrum suddenly improved my signal everywhere. I can even get connected in a house addition in the back, which I assumed would always be a dead spot (because of the house's outside wall blocking the signal, besides the added distance to the router). I don't have a beautiful mansion like yours, so I don't have to jump through all those hoops to get coverage. But I appreciate you taking the time to spread the knowledge anyway.
As a network engineer your network is beautiful. I'd also like to see an episode where you go hard on cable management not because I wanna learn but because I wanna watch
Like you I'm old enough to remember pre 802.11b days.. Breezelan had pcmcia cards that handled seemless hand off to 60mph! Wavelan had 915mhz ap's that with a 5w amp and 14db patch panel not only got through the house , but through the neighbors to ¼ mile away! I was trying to start my own broadband WISP back in the nineties...
Happy to know that I set up basically the same network without the udmpro as I use the software version to control APs installed on a local VM and a HP 24 1G ports with Poe and recently added a microtick 10g switch to handle faster devices and the 5gbps internet box
As usual, another great video! There's always something interesting happening at Dave's Garage! And please my friend, tell us more about your VLANs! Keep rocking! 🚀
Man I love the audio and dialogue delivery. Sounds like I am watching cyberpunk. I would recommend updating some of the video graphics/background to complete the ambiance.
It's a beauty to hear a mega sw engineer that knows well the ISO/OSI layers. Great man ! Btw... Every time I lainch now the task manager I have a small lag.... thinking at your video :-) ciao from Italy
See, the trick is to have a house small enough to only need 1 access point.
You can live in your car but you can't drive your house!
@@DavesGarage Uh, you can. They call that an RV :)
in UK / EUROPE that is the case. Because the average house costs the whole family people worth of organs and is small enough to house the whole family like its crowded train ride. Its not with bad intentions. You see, the English did this so they could ease communication with inside the house. They no longer need to shout WTF from the top of their lungs. Because the houses are small everyone will hear you say with a normal voice "I beg your pardon?!" which is much scarier.
@@rohanofelvenpower5566 On the other hand, European houses are more likely to be multi floor or made of reinforced concrete which blocks (especially 5GHz) signals much more than the materials found in most American houses would. Even when I lived in small commie apartment I had issues with signal coverage with one AP.
@@snap_oversteer Yeah, I can confirm this! We have a 3 floor house, and a walls made from brick, the floors from concrete... I have 2 Unifi AP-s (one indoor, one outdoor) and when I use 5G on my phone, I have weak connectivity from both APs, even one of them are 2 meters from me, but I have two walls on that 2 meters...
It's truly amazing how you manage to point out every important aspect of the subjects you dive in to, time and time again. I hope you realize how helpful this is, perhaps intentionally, but in any way of good use. So, thank you Mr. Plummer!
Thanks! Glad some folks appreciate it!
Monetized video.
I’m an angry dad. I’m questioning the algorithm and its desire to fulfill my needs.
@@DavesGarage The answer to slow wifi is to plug directly into the router. 😂
@@techluvin7691 Was the video not of value to you?
Yes, VLAN video is needed. Thank you Dave! 👍
Did you mean _WLAN_ ?
@@markusTegelane good one, doublevee lan
Agreed! A VLAN episode would be great.
In the video, it might be useful to cover things like accessing across VLAN and hardening them against common VLAN hopping attacks :)
Yep, I've got UniFi gear too and my main point of buyers remorse has been the unconventional way they handle subnetting and VLANs
A guide on the Ubiquity way to do this would be superb!
As a farmer, mechanic, and tech person with some programming experience I love your channel! ALL your videos interest me from the lessons in computer history(got my first pc in '93), programming, your garage, your truck and light mods, and showing us how your home network is setup. It's only slightly out of reach for most but gives us a glimpse into what we may be using eventually or parts we may want to copy ourselves. Just keep showing us around and how you do things as it all contains very valuable lessons/information. Even though I fully grasp most everything you've discussed I still feel I've learned something by the end. As mentioned, you explain things along with all the hiccups you encountered doing it yourself. This is how I try to explain things to others but it is underappreciated in most cases and seems like a waste of my breathe at times. I appreciate the way you do it. It feels like accelerated learning. Have a good one!
Great video! A couple of clarifications: Band Steering usually works by ignoring Probe Requests in 2.4 GHz. When a client sends Probe Requests in 2.4 GHz, the infrastructure will ignore them X amount of times, causing most clients to only see the 5 GHz APs. It works... but can cause devices in 2.4 GHz to take longer to associate.
Fast Roaming works by speeding up authentication when a client roams. Basically, it skips a number of steps in the association/authentication process. As a result, it's not actually seamless, but it is fast enough that the user typically won't notice, or the interruption in their application will be minimal.
Sweet network setup!
Hi Dave, Another old-timer Bob here. I really like listening to old time tech in your channel. Before I forget, let me put in a plug for more vlan coverage.
I go back to IBM 360 assembler and customized worldwide networking with Pan Am and Avis in the late '60s and early '70s.
I jumped on the mini and micro train while I continued to work with mainframes in the '80s and beyond. I loved windows when it came out, but I grew cold to it after 7.
I'm retired now and I live in Linux. I usually keep a single modern windows machine to run a few windows apps reliably.
Thanks for your channel.
Dave, my APs have been fighting me for the last 4 days making my family crazy. thank you again for being punctual on solving my issues that I didn't even realize you knew I was having. Informative and useful as always. and yes, a video on VLANs would be greatly appreciated.
My UDM Pro died after 2 years of service right after attempting the latest UnifiOS update. I had a bad feeling about it and waited a while till finally decided to update. It no longer booted, thankfully I still had my old Linksys router which had 8 ethernet ports and I was able to have a functional network while I RMAd my unit. Really enjoyed your video thanks for sharing.
Thanks again Dave. I am a retired IT manager but have been out of the game for so long that I feel literally left behind with today's technology. I actually retired prior to the AdVent of Wi-Fi becoming the standard that it is today. (back in the day everything was hard lined many hours at a punch down block LOL) Your videos are like an advanced refresher course . I enjoy every one of them and to be quite honest they bring back so many memories to those early network/PC days . absolutely, I think you should do a VLAN follow-up.
Very clearly explained. I especially liked the last section on VLAN & the importance of segmenting your network.
I started down this rabbit hole with UniFi , a udm pro and the smallest ap they had. Now it’s evolved to 15 G4 bullets 2 48 port pro switches a 24 port and a 16 port pro units and a unvr. I wouldn’t say I have any regrets but I wanna do more. Thank you for your awesome content I found your channel a little over a year ago and I’ve enjoyed it immensely!!
Unifi gear is addictive... I hear you.
It isn't exactly cheap (nor the most expensive) & Ubiquiti are not perfect by any means, but you can end up with a pretty amazing setup.
Rabbit hole indeed..
I went for the sbc controller route. Close to the same functionality but at a fraction of the cost. sbc router with openWRT that controls the network, a nanopi neo3 that runs the unifi control interface and ubiquitis accesspoints (dumb ap). :)
Dave, I greatly appreciate your hard work on making this channel and I would definitely appreciate a video dedicated to VLAN explanation, implementation, and descriptions of use cases.
VLANs are used to create "mini-networks". You use them to separate users and devices into groups. For example, the typical setup are VLANs for a management network (used to literally manage the network and nothing more, like your hardware), your main network for your normal users, an IoT network for non-network hardware devices, and a security camera network. I also have a separate work network that I only have my employer's devices on to separate them from the rest of my network. The I have multiple Wifi networks for wireless devices that need access to those VLANs. There are lots of tutorials on UA-cam for this stuff, including setup, for a UniFi system. But hopefully this can get you started.
Hi Dave. This was a very interesting session. I would appreciate a wireless VLAN tutorial. Many thanks.
plus one'd
A few years ago, my son talked me into buying a brand of router I'd never heard of. Ubiquity makes a brand called Amplifi. I bought the Amplifi router and it's been bullet proof since. Even automatically downloads firmware updates, slick mesh points and it just works. Hat's off to Ubiquiti for solid hardware
Great video! I completely agree about hardwiring APs. In fact, when working ISP tech support I always advised people to hardwire any non-portable devices to alleviate them off their wireless bandwidth, especially in apartments or densely populated areas. It’s amazing how much people rely on Wi-Fi these days, yet they take so little if any time at all to understand it.
OMG that house! Very nice, Dave.
I use UniFi as well. I had to run cat6 in my house, man that was a job.
I also used the Ubiquiti in wall access points too. So every room in the house has it's own hard-wired ethernet and WiFI access points.
Next up is setting up a media server so I can stop consuming so much data from the outside world.
Been seven months…. How’s the project going.
I found your channel like an hour ago and I've already learned so much. Thank you so much!
Dave, you've just described the plight my dad has battled for decades. Me, my mom, and my sisters have bemoaned the poor Wi-fi for years!
I too use Unifi. I started with the UDM and once I saw how good it was, I immediately upgraded to the UDM Pro and one AP. Now I have four WiFi 6e APs and three 10G switches. All of my APs are hard wired with meshing turned off. Absolutley love Unifi! But the same for me, it has been almost 2 years now so I also have the original UDM Pro with a 1TB WD Blue SSD and three G4 Pro camera. 77 devices, lol on four separate networks and four separate SSIDs with one being IoT only.
Hi Dave. Great Stuff!
I'm sure a VLAN tutorial would be well-received by us all.
btw I hope your back is progressing well.
I solved my Wifi "issues" (three WAPs, three SSIDs) in 2018 with an Orbi RBK50 and one satellite (RBR50). Set it and forget it. 70-80% signal strength at 500Mbps. One SSID. Happy (quiet) family, Happy Dad!
That setup looks really nice! thankfully my 800sqft home only needs one wireless router in a central location to meet most of my needs.
Flex all you want Dave, you deserve it, and your giving back, Thank You! People like you give me something to keep living and to strive for, never give up, never surrender! 😃
VLANs are an oft misunderstood concept. I really struggled with it when I was trying to get my head around it for my home network and one thing I found is that the ease of deployment seems to be variable between switch vendors.
I'm giving a talk on VLANs and Switchdev next week :)
This is great Dave. I light up about 6 acres with 3 houses the same equipment. I have the SE version of the router BUT it’s important that folks understand that all the non SFP+ ports share the same 1gb controller. So I have the SE router connected to fiber to 3 pro 10G switches. Anyhow, thanks for the video.
Dave, great minds think alike. I'm a fan of the Ubiquiti solution as well. I'm just starting the process of setting up an IOT network and would love to hear what you have had luck doing. I think the specific trickier points to set up are going to be items like... how to Cast from a phone on main network to Roku on IOT network. I'm sure the firewall rules and which rules for typical items are going to be the trickiest part of this!
Yeah, that was my issue too. On a virtualised Pfsense, setup. I now am using an Openwrt setup, but want to "play" on the Pfsense!
@brianfritz575, simple, your phone is an IOT device, put it on the IOT network, or if you prefer to keep it on your main network, just have it join the IOT one when you cast.
Off course Dave, do the VLAN video. From explaining the technology, packet management and how routing is done, to use cases and the angry dad's recommended brand of choice.
Might be one of the few times in my life that I can truly say I completely relate to Dave on something. I believe almost every Dad knows this struggle.
Thank you. Yes please, VLan Videos would be great. Much needed.
Along with the why, when how and alternatives and do’s and dont’s but please always discuss the security side to do things and offer an alternative with minimal compromise etc.
Thank you for your contributions and helpfulness. Great channel.
Dave I would love to see an episode about vlans. I was trying to deploy a network at my office trying to use vlans to separate printer and server access to certain clients only. While also offering a guest network, and I still don't understand what to do or how to implement it today. Most forums speak about it like we should be born knowing what a VLAN is. I would love to see an episode with your breakdown on it. As always thank you for your videos Dave!
Those Unifi wap's and their entire ecosystem is amazing. They do such a good job at not making it completely proprietary and at the same time making it all work together smoothly. The PoE options are also a big plus.
I've been running Unifi gear in my sprawling house (not as large or nice as Dave's though!) since 2018. I can vouch for everything that he has said here. There's also a lot more to it that he hasn't (yet?) covered. In depth VLAN for example.
Great Video Dave, I wish I saw this 6 years ago when I had the exact same issues. I was lucky and stumbled on the Unifi access points, I installed 3 of the long range units and haven't had a single issue since then.
Nice tips given here, Dave.
For optimal performance, signal level should be kept above -67dBm. WiFiman is a good app to track wifi signal for iPhone+Android.
In high density scenarios, where your APs coverage significantly overlap, try to reduce the transmit power to a point where you're keeping good signal and performance.
For the record, some Wi-Fi devices have either poor antenna design, or limited transmit power.
Reducing transmit power will reduce the cases where your devices still indicate 3 bars of signal and yet gets poor performance.
Remember the rule: "WiFi works best when APs whisper and stations shout."
Last thing: making your AP transmitting above 100mW / 20dBm is futile, as a wide range of devices won't be able to send data beyond that power level.
Hardcore advices (don't bother if this doesn't mean anything to you):
- Set DTIM to 3 to optimize power consumption on mobile devices.
- Turn on Multicast optimization, especially if you're using your carrier's IPTV service (country/service specific).
- For 2.4GHz, disable 802.11b rates if all your devices support at least 802.11g.
- Enable 802.11d (world mode) and set your country code (especially if you welcome people from foreign places, or if you live in Europe, this will make the device adjust to your local regulations).
- Set your APs to ignore any signal below -83dBm on 2.4GHz.
- Enable UNII-II channels and DFS if you don't live near an airport or a weather radar (country specific, check local regulations).
There's a lot more to say, but this comment is already getting too long.
I have a UDM Pro as well, with 5 APs, 4 in the house and 1 in the sheshed. I love the system. Gotta add one more AP where I have a small deadzone in the most critical usage place, the bath room.
As I watch this I realize just how different youtube content creators are as many take a lot of their audiences knowledge for granted. I have watched so much content on setting up a home network, never mind WIFI, and in many cases am still left with often times basic questions. I have been researching the Ubiquiti gear for months now, and even their own site is lacking. This is a great video on home networking in general. Thank you!! Also I would never have considered the Dream Machine SE, but now that you explain how it fits into the entire ecosystem it seems a no brainer. Now with WIFI 7 just around the corner I have to decide whether I want to invest money into WIFI 6, or just wait. I'm hoping that Ubiquiti's lack of emphasis on 6E is just them eagerly working away at the real replacement for WIFI 6. Fingers crossed. Tip for other viewers, you can never ever run too much ethernet cable. I wish I would have pulled three times the cable I did during my most recent remodel. As you elude to Dave, if you have a device that is stationary (eg. attached to a wall, or sitting on a desk) then try to hardwire it with ethernet cable. If it has an ethernet port then try and fill it. I'm trying to hardwire all of my TV's, which means I am going to have to fish more cable, but it is what it is. Thumbs up again for a great video.
For 99% of cases a single ethernet cable will be sufficient to provide full bandwidth for multiple devices. Just add a small switch. Ubiquiti makes them. Run one ethernet, attach to the small switch, then attach your devices to the switch. I have this throughout my house. TV, Xbox, AVR, etc. all attached to a small UniFi switch that is actually powered by POE. Works perfectly. It makes no sense to run 5 ethernet runs. You'll never own any devices that consume that much bandwidth. A 4K Netflix stream only uses 15Mbps. A AAA title Xbox download is can max out a 1GB ISP connection, but you're not doing that often. A single Cat6 will easily do 10Gbps. So worst case you add a 10Gbps switch, but that won't be applicable except in high nerd situations.
Great video Dave, I'd love to see a VLAN video. I'm a networking expert but it's always enlightening to see how other people implement VLAN's unique to their own environments.
Dave, thank you for all your effort. You do a fantastic job, and your content has been really helpful. :)
Just a head's up: VLANs alone do not limit access across VLANs. A device on one VLAN could communicate with equipment on another VLAN via any device permitted to forward packets. The exception is guest networks, which have firewalling in place by default to isolate devices connecting to that network. On your non-guest VLANs, you should consider what you need & want, then configure the firewall accordingly.
Another tip: Produce QR codes and flash NFC tags with the connection information for your guest network, then visitors can connect to that network without typing in a PSK and you don't need to leave the guest network SSID open.
Yes Dave please give a talk on VLAN
Fantastic video Dave! After about a year of debating on which solution to go with, I finally bit the bullet and ordered the Dream machine SE, a switch, and two of Unifi access points. It all arrives tomorrow, so glad to see you post this. As always, your content is both informative and entertaining.. Thank you!
There is one basic rule I try to follow:
“If it doesn’t have to move around, WIRE IT.”
This of course only applies to devices that actually have an Ethernet port (and the ability to have an Ethernet cable run to it), but the idea is to absolutely minimize the number of devices that use Wi-Fi to only those that absolutely need it, so the ones that are using it have far less frequency congestion to contend with.
That principle alone can make a huge difference.
As someone who has just recently upgraded their internet connection and subsequently discovered that my internet is now faster than my home network, I now find myself researching how to up my game on my home network strategy. Great video and a vote from me for a followup VLAN video.
Thanks Dave, great video. I have also been using Ubiquiti gear in my home. I had been running the Ubiquiti Console on a Raspberry pi with good results. But I just took the plunge into their camera offerings. That required that I replace the Pi with a device where I could run the Protect software. So now I have a Cloud Key Gen 2 +. My question: On which vlan do you run printers? And which network do you put the SmartTV on? Those need connectivity to family computers and phones. So I've been putting them on the Main VLAN. If you do a VLAN video, could you address those questions?
You would normally put the printer and TV on an IoT VLAN. Then you setup a firewall rule that lets devices on your "main" VLAN initiate communication with devices on your IoT VLAN, but your IoT stuff can't initiate communication with your main network devices. Obviously it depends on your use case and you can an get very complex if needed. But that's the general idea.
Definitely want a van video, would be much more appreciated than I could ever express in words. Thanks for the awesome content.
When my spoiled kids whine about wifi I send them out into the yard to pull weeds etc.
This is the best solution!
Learning the value of what you have, a lost trait of the new generation.
@@everyhandletaken This is the problem with human nature in general. When we're given things without having to earn them, we feel entitled that these things are somehow 'owed to us'.
@@fredflintstone8048 so true
@everyhandletaken I believe every generation has said this about the new one. Of course their generation was never the problem, just the next one.
Ok, but now let’s do a guide for those who are NOT millionaires. ;-)
Learn to take concepts and adapt them to your individual needs and constraints instead of digging at people that have achieved success.
You don't have to spend a lot on unifi. One U6 PRO is $120 to $160. If that is all the coverage you need, that is all you need to start. Just Like Dave said over time you can add to that as funds and needs develop.
I've been using a Unifi AP since about 2019, and now have 3 around the house. When I rebuilt my network (then still in an apartment) around 2014, I used a Ubiquiti Edgemax router, but didn't go with a Unifi AP initially. Since I only needed one, I didn't want a system that required a controller, and at that time they only used a special passive 24V PoE mode. So I went through two different brands of APs for a while, which each had various problems (mostly related to either VLANs, IPv6, or RADIUS). Eventually I decided just to get a Unifi after they switched to standard 802.3af, and by that time I had a VM server set up for other applications I could run the controller on.
They've definitely figured out how to dominate the market for small installations that need more professional features. I think the key was pricing the entry level APs around $100 and not requiring dedicated hardware or software licensing for the controller.
I would like to hear more about your Unifi VLAN configuration. In my experience so far, it's easy to partition the network into VLANs, but unifi doesn't want to step on toes and lets traffic flow between them freely. I'm curious what changes you made in order to lock these down, ESPECIALLY for an IoT VLAN, which never seems to stop growing (at least in my experience!)
the vlans in unifi wants to have a unifi security gateway to work properly (which the dream machine provides, but you can get a security gateway as its own device) but it is possible to use them in other ways if you have a proper enterprise router or firewall.
Great video on the pains of "dad the wifi is down" which any parent has heard.
A video on VLANs would be nice.
I am in the process of doing a ESP32 LED display for the house based on your videos.
Thanks
Did you consider blurring your home ip? There will always people that like to mess with people. Also, when you pull up your ip, a webserver lists your dyndns address so it's even easier to follow after 😅Just something to consider.
I figure there's a public domain on that one, so I'm not well hidden to begin with! But you're probably right!
@@DavesGarage it's worth using CloudFlare as a reverse proxy, will prevent you having to deal with DDoS / DoX etc (then blur your IP in the video 😅)
I figured I wasn't the only one who'd do a quick check on that IP...
Yes, please do a LOT more content VLANs. Thanks, as always, for sharing your experience.
You got me interested in vlans and learning more about networking than I already do
I’m literally sorting ours out and want unifi. Great vid. What a house!
That was super cool, actually gave me some new insight to home networking apart from just having my modem, and one router to do all the work.
Nice and classic solution. The disadvantage is the binding with this vendor. We have done quite a few builds with a classic other solution. This solution is Mikrotik for core router and ubiquiti for wifi system, it is this hybrid implementation that behaves extremely well.
Thanks for posting this so it's easy to understand. I've got my network setup the same way, but have struggled to explain to others how I've got it configured. I'm a foster parent to teenagers so I try my best to keep internet usage safe including making specific wifi networks that shut off at 10:00 to encourage kids to put devices down and go to bed.
I've been trying to figure out a good way to document my setup to share with other foster families but haven't taken the time to do so. I'll be sharing this with others, thanks
@corymason4818 ... good luck getting teenagers to accept wifi shutoff at 10:00 pm. Let us know how that works out for you ...😀
Here in India, Unifi stuff is about ten times as expensive as my budget allows. I have $12-20 Mi routers running OpenWRT as access points with a wired gigabit backhaul. For management I have an old broken laptop running as a server. Happy with the setup so far.
I ended up setting up a wifi 6E mesh network with 4 nodes across the house and it works surprisingly well.
Hi Dave always a pleasure to listen to you, this one was on point and it hit home, yeah I think I need a refresher on VLAN
I love the Ubiquiti gear, but their access points are like a gateway drug. Once you get one running you start combing the Unifi site asking yourself, "How can I incorporate that device into my network?" Thanks for sharing your network. I am jealous of the breadth of devices you've been able to connect.
Dave, my setup almost mirrors what you explained. I started with the Linksys 54wrt and switched to unifi about 10 years ago. We use the Cisco wireless controller (WLC) at work and was pleasantly surprised at how the unifi controller seamlessly managed the network without much fuss. No dedicated H/W and most settings out of the box just work. I have since recommended/setup the unifi solution for friends and family and almost never receive the "support calls" usually disguised dinner invitation to fix stuff. The VLAN setup is pretty straightforward no CLI or in depth knowledge required - you might want to explain that in a future video.
Huge Ubiquiti user here too. I've setup the local church, a volunteer fire department, my mother, and our house with Unifi setups.
Great tip about isolating all those IOT devices into separate VLANs, plus one for guests. Thank you.
Love the channel. I'm glad you have grown so much. Been watching for a while now. Definitely would love to see a video on VLANs, even though I already understand them.
This should be named “The angry parents’ guide to home wifi”. This mom is the one who handles all things tech.
Yes please on a video about VLANs. I just started figuring out home networking and setting up a homelab, so VLANs would be interesting to play with.
Great video Dave. Unifi FTW
Just got the Orbi….top of the line for 600 bucks at Costco. Like you 2 houses on 2 acres. Seemless Wifi. Absolute best purchase EVER. Can’t say enough and after
I bought it found out they had Wi-Fi 7 available. Plug and play. Crestron…that’s a flex.
Really would like to hear more about this VLAN setup. Thanks for the great, easy to follow information.
VLAN sounds like a great video idea! I'd love to be able to strategically expose some internal devices on the net to more than one VLAN, so I can keep a super secure on for just my stuff and stick anyone else on a passworded, but still sandboxed one, while they could still access some internal servers or other stuff.
I'd like to hear more about your Crestron home automation. My experience with Crestron (and AMX) is that only technicians who would for a certified Crestron installers have the tools to configure and maintain the systems. That's definitely a no-go for someone like me who wants to be able to configure a home automation system myself.
yep... I started with two linksys routers.... then went to three d-link, then once I upgraded to unifi I installed 4 access points around my house... problem solved. I upgraded my network with unifi switches and router to the USG pro 4. Its been flawless and with ubiquity pushing regular updates and patches with new features and fixes I feel I got my money worth. Unifi controller runs on a pi4 in the rack... really a slick system overall.
I would certainly like to learn more about VLANs. Please do a video on it!
Excellent video, you always explain everything in a clear and concise, simple but technical way. Thank you.
Great channel
I would definitely be interested in a video on VLANs. Also, thanks so much for the fantastic video explaining the Unifi ecosystem, now I just need to come up with the money and I'm ready to take the plunge.
My house is a bit smaller but I am using five Unifi access points. I'm using slightly older (3) UAP-AC-Pro and (2) UAP-nanoHD access points. All of my APs have a 1Gbps PoE network connection. I could easily get away with less but bandwidth and reliability may be hampered. My APs can see nearly 500 other SSIDs in the neighborhood. My APs monitor channels and can de-power the transmission power to limit their range automatically. I have some variability throughout my property but in doing speed tests, the weakest area of my property provides at least 200 Mbps up and down, where most is around 400 Mbps up and down. I do my speed tests using both publicly available speed tests as well as my own speed test server running LibreSpeed. For devices that use WiFi, that should be plenty of bandwidth. If you need better bandwidth, I have plenty of network jacks throughout the house.
I run my Unifi controller (UniFi Network Application) on a Ubuntu 22.04.2 VM. Like Dave, I have separate VLANs for my personal devices, IoT devices, and guests. I also include a VLAN for WiFi purposes for cameras. My camera network though has no direct access to the Internet, as I don't want them to report home to their manufacturer. The network video recorder has access to the camera network as well as another network. I have other wired VLANs for different web services operating on VMs. I don't use Ubiquiti's router though, I instead use pfSense Plus.
Just after you enter my house, I have a picture frame that contains two custom-stylized QR codes. One directs your smartphone to connect with my guest VLAN and the other to run a speedtest with one of my LibreSpeed test servers. For those with devices without cameras, I also have the SSID and passphrase needed to gain access to my guest VLAN, as well as the URL for my speed test server.
I had to go with 2 perm access points, and 1 temp one, just for the smoker. The trick was to use the same SSID and put everything on a different channel. No issues.
Yes, definitely interested in the VLAN video. I don't have that dream networked home you have but I want to have my server/NAS, cables for all devices, and a better internet connection, but most importantly, make my network better managed than it is now.
Ubiquiti stuff is addictive, too... you get used to being able to manage (and more importantly, diagnose) network issues. Also, I would enjoy a video about configuring VLANs.
"My wife has an ipad, macbook, and iphone" sheeeeeesh that one hurt lmao. I would think of all people your one of the most well equipped to make a compelling case against such discrepancies. Regardless i appreciate all you do to document early computing breakthroughs
VLAN setup and admin would be a great topic. Thanks for the info and greetings from San Francisco.
Completely agree. Get good APs (I love u6-lr), hardwire them all, place them optimally (heatmaps and "ap-on-a-stick" for the win), and you're set.
I would definitely love a video on VLAN's. I hope you can make one if you haven't already!
I'm glad I'm not alone with my wifi woes. I just bought some TP Link equipment but haven't had a chance to try it out
Love how great your videos are. I think I understand VLANs but I'm sure you have lots to teach me.
Great video! I'd appreciate a VLAN video I find they become quite complicated to understand.
so much information. This is the ultimately 'home' deployment as it has elements of SMB network deployment elements. Very well done.
Man you hit a nerve on this one! we had the same issues only we went TP Link and omada controller due to cost but works like a charm! also we used Ubiquity Light Beams to make a connection between our PFSense router and another property 1000ft away. on the other property I built a solar powered job box and attached a pole with an outdoor wifi and the light beam on the property and used golf cart batteries to power it all. No power on my other property... anyway it all worked out and now we have wifi all over our mountain.
Your mention of do we want a video on vlans is a Yes Please. I’m an IT generalist working my day job but would like to learn more about the ins and outs of vlans for work and home use. That would be great if you can swing it, thanks!
Dave, Much respect for the channel, just my kind of content. also much respect for your contributions to Windows OS. i also love ubiquiti gear and have a hardwired network in my house. i fully understand the pain of my children saying dad my youtube kids is offline again, they have no idea what we grew up with!! funniest part for me is when the network or isp goes down and its just my fault. Kids read a book of play a game on the floor not watch a screen. I wish i could get them off the instant gratification, but they are only 7 & 10. Rant over, much respect for task manager it has been a constant help for years of windows troubleshooting amongst other things.
Great Video. I would love to see more info on setting up Vlans for a home with IoT devices and possibly how to block internet access for the IoT devices that don't need to call home. Would be helpful for many people setting up smart homes (as I have been with Home Assistant for the past few months)
Linksys WRT54G! I used the 'S' variant for many years. I was so surprised when just switching to the vanilla 2.4/5-GHz router from Spectrum suddenly improved my signal everywhere. I can even get connected in a house addition in the back, which I assumed would always be a dead spot (because of the house's outside wall blocking the signal, besides the added distance to the router).
I don't have a beautiful mansion like yours, so I don't have to jump through all those hoops to get coverage. But I appreciate you taking the time to spread the knowledge anyway.
As a network engineer your network is beautiful. I'd also like to see an episode where you go hard on cable management not because I wanna learn but because I wanna watch
That is another excellent video, Dave. Can you please do one about VLAN? Thanks 😀
Like you I'm old enough to remember pre 802.11b days..
Breezelan had pcmcia cards that handled seemless hand off to 60mph!
Wavelan had 915mhz ap's that with a 5w amp and 14db patch panel not only got through the house , but through the neighbors to ¼ mile away!
I was trying to start my own broadband WISP back in the nineties...
Happy to know that I set up basically the same network without the udmpro as I use the software version to control APs installed on a local VM and a HP 24 1G ports with Poe and recently added a microtick 10g switch to handle faster devices and the 5gbps internet box
As usual, another great video! There's always something interesting happening at Dave's Garage! And please my friend, tell us more about your VLANs! Keep rocking! 🚀
Man I love the audio and dialogue delivery. Sounds like I am watching cyberpunk. I would recommend updating some of the video graphics/background to complete the ambiance.
a big 👍 to the extras! Great performances guys!
It's a beauty to hear a mega sw engineer that knows well the ISO/OSI layers. Great man ! Btw... Every time I lainch now the task manager I have a small lag.... thinking at your video :-) ciao from Italy