Post a picture of your latest purchase.

Non_Adj_LCA_PHR_Red__81648.1284875973.1280.1280.jpg
 
Grabbed a new router. I was going to go with one of the higher end Asus models, until I discovered RouterBoards. No pretty GUI to configure, its all command line, but itll do everything but suck your dick :lol: Nice piece of kit for $130. The big selling point for me was its 1W wireless signal strength, 10x more than the 100mW of consumer-grade routers.
http://www.roc-noc.com/pdf/RB2011/RB2011UAS_2HnD.pdf

RB2011UAS_1200.jpg
 
Last edited:
Grabbed a new router. I was going to go with one of the higher end Asus models, until I discovered RouterBoards. No pretty GUI to configure, its all command line, but itll do everything but suck your dick :lol: Nice piece of kit for $130. The big selling point for me was its 1W wireless signal strength, 10x more than the 100mW of consumer-grade routers.
http://www.roc-noc.com/pdf/RB2011/RB2011UAS_2HnD.pdf

RB2011UAS_1200.jpg

Damn 1W is huge. I need to check this out ;)
 
NBU-Style-Carry.jpg

My brother just got this... Little does he know I'm going to swipe it soon for Christmas and have a few "things" done to it... :firedevil
 
Damn 1W is huge. I need to check this out ;)

Thats why I got it...thats a sick signal. Its the strongest legally allowed by the FCC. Its not your typical router though, you have to configure it on the command line. No pretty web GUI.
 
Stupid question... How the fuck do you program these? Easy or hard? And is this 1W the 1GBS signal?

It can be a bitch. If youre not used to working from this...

Screenshot-Terminal.png


...you might wind up missing hair :lol:

The 1W is the radio output power for the wifi. Most consumer grade wifi routers are 100mW to 200mW, these have 5 to 10x the signal strength :).
 
Oh yeah, another cool thing about the RouterBoard is its ability to use 3G and LTE modems from your phone service provider, via the front mounted USB port. If you live in the boonies and cant get cable or DSL, but get LTE service on your phone, youll be able to get it on the RouterBoard and have your whole network going. If youre in a well populated area and get cable or DSL, you can still use a LTE modem for fallover. Your cable modem dies, you still have internet :).
 
Back
Top