then youre already putting in 5-20 dollars worth of cable, 20-35 dollars in
surge protection. 5-15 dollars in mounting hardware in incidental costs
aside from the CPE there isnt really much breathing room for residential
29-39 dollar connections. Especially in cases like us who eat the CPE cost.
The reality is it would be just one more piece of equipment for customers
to plug in incorrectly, or even better, completely bypass.
That being said, I want it, and I want it to display the MAC address of the
attached device so that when a customer gets a new router to self provision
they can look on the display and know what it is, we still have CS staff
telling them to look on the sticker on the router.. fucking dipshits.


E

On Sun, Oct 5, 2014 at 6:13 PM, Josh Reynolds via Af <[email protected]> wrote:

>  Honestly, a RB2011 fills that niche pretty well. Lock the LCD to display
> only WAN bandwidth, and disable the touchscreen. Techs can log into the
> RB2011 with the admin credentials and check on the wireless clients,
> interface errors, run speed tests (tcp) to the headend of your network,
> etc.
>
> $5/mo for router management a month is what we charge, and the people
> that have the service love it.
>
> Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
> SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com
>  On 10/05/2014 01:18 PM, TJ Trout via Af wrote:
>
> I would love to find a router that has poe output and all of the
> diagnostic features you mentioned. It would be nice if the customer could
> just look at the router to see the status of the connection up down or
> otherwise.
> On Oct 5, 2014 2:13 PM, "Chris Fabien via Af" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I'd say you are correct. Would love to have the functionality but even at
>> $75 I couldn't justify the cost.
>> On Oct 5, 2014 5:08 PM, "Forrest Christian (List Account) via Af" <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Following up on the previous email about product ideas, I have an idea
>>> for a product which at least I think would be really cool, but I also think
>>> would likely be a big flop, just because of the apparent cost sensitivity
>>> of installs.
>>>
>>>  It seems to me that it would be nice to replace the power injector at
>>> customer sites with more of an intelligent device.   One that provides
>>> functionality like traffic metering, cable diagnostics, customer-location
>>> speed tests, and so on.   The unit would have jacks for the radio, the
>>> customer equipment, and power.   It would also have a display which shows
>>> real-time usage data for the customer to be able to determine for
>>> themselves what their current internet consumption is.   There are a lot of
>>> natural outgrowths from this such as watchdog reset of the radio itself,
>>> automatic problem notification to the WISP, etc.   My goal would be to
>>> instrument this as much as possible.
>>>
>>>  If you think of this as a 'smart power meter' for internet, with
>>> diagnostic tools built in, then you've got the basic idea.  This is not
>>> intended to replace the customer router/nat device, and will only be a
>>> Layer 2 device as far as traffic goes.  There will likely be some limited
>>> traffic shaping possible based on the underlying ethernet swtich chipset.
>>>
>>>  Unfortunately, these can't be a $20 device.   $75 might be doable for
>>> higher volumes, but $100 is more in the comfort zone for the volumes I
>>> typically move.  Of course, this is a CPE device and I'm not even sure how
>>> many I'd sell so these prices are guesses at best - but more likely to go
>>> down instead of up.
>>>
>>>  Although I suspect most people would love to have one of these at each
>>> install, I have a hard time believing that most people would swallow adding
>>> even $75 to the cost of each install, let alone the $100 which might be the
>>> price I'd have to hit for lower volume.   Is this a fair assumption?  Would
>>> you add such a device to each install?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>


-- 
All parts should go together without forcing. You must remember that the
parts you are reassembling were disassembled by you. Therefore, if you
can't get them together again, there must be a reason. By all means, do not
use a hammer. -- IBM maintenance manual, 1925

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