RoadWarrior VPN Design back to a VPN concentrator.

On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 3:06 PM, Eric Kuhnke <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm really hoping to avoid USB if at all possible. The wholly integrated
> HSPA+/LTE modems that have a 100BaseTX ethernet interface are quite
> expensive, like the basic Opengear model that is $380.
>
> USB could work with a raspberry pi2 if absolutely necessary.
>
> One of the things I can predict, the SIM card + Ting concept will almost
> certainly not get a public ipv4 address, it'll be behind some some of cgnat
> with no ports forwarded, so the raspberry pi2 needs to initiate and maintain
> a persistent SSH connection or similar tunnel (such as a tcp based openvpn
> tunnel with unique-per-device static point-to-point keys shared by server
> and client, in which the pi2 is the client).
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 1:00 PM, Paul McCall <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Eric,
>>
>>
>>
>> What USB device would you be looking to use with Ting?  It looks very
>> interesting.  And, wondering about performance (RX/TX) on the LTE device… on
>> that could run an external antenna to get it outside the walls of a building
>> would be helpful also
>>
>>
>>
>> Paul, PDMNet
>>
>>
>>
>> From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Kuhnke
>> Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2016 2:37 PM
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: [AFMUG] Anyone using Ting SIM cards for OOB management?
>>
>>
>>
>> For example with HSPA+/LTE modems, to have proper OOB into the routers at
>> a crucial POP.
>>
>> $6/mo per active SIM card is pretty cheap for M2M data SIMs, though the
>> $/MB rate is not the best. But for the application I have in mind it would
>> be console SSH traffic, which is super low bandwidth.
>>
>> https://ting.com/rates
>>
>> For LTE they're an MVNO on AT&T and T-Mobile.
>>
>> Looking at the FAQ they say that the data usage can be limited and
>> monitored on a per-device basis, which could be useful.
>>
>>
>

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