You can, but they charge full price for the license, and you should be very careful to ensure the box is not EOL (they won't license EOL boxes.)

If you are looking at one, I can check it out for you and let you know. If you can someone find a non-EOL box at a good price, it can be worth it, but I've seen a lot of people burned buying old, used boxes and trying to license them.

On 6/21/2016 11:09 AM, Jason McKemie wrote:
I'd be interested in seeing if you could buy a used one and then get a new license for it.

On Tue, Jun 21, 2016 at 8:31 AM, Kurt Fankhauser <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Daniel,

    I have the lowest Procera model which is the 7340 model which will
    do 1gbps. It was around $18,000 which included first year of
    signature updates which is like $2500/year. Bought it through
    Powercode. I checked on ebay and there always seems to be some
    used Proceras on there.
    
http://www.ebay.com/sch/Computers-Tablets-Networking/58058/i.html?_from=R40&_nkw=procera

    I wonder if they will let you buy a used one and then put a
    current license on one. If so the cost to get into one would be
    drastically lower than what I paid for a much more powerfull unit.



    On Tue, Jun 21, 2016 at 1:33 AM, Daniel Gerlach
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        which Procera are you using and what is the market price ? Thx
        Daniel

        2016-06-21 5:49 GMT+02:00 Kurt Fankhauser
        <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>:

            I actually got comments from customers saying the network
            was running smoother once I put rules in the Procera to
            limit streaming, updates, etc. Biggest benefit is they
            can't max the connection out with any 1 service which
            allows them to do huge Apple updates while still watching
            Netflix.

            On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 11:30 PM, Faisal Imtiaz
            <[email protected]
            <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

                "the whole limit per customer thing because of title 2
                stuff."

                Please try to gain a better and clear understanding of
                the Regulatory Rules and Requirements...

                They don't say, you cannot do it... They say you have
                to disclose up front what you do, and you have to do
                it across the board.... i.e. you cannot discriminate
                between streaming from one provider vs another content
                provider...or for one customer and not for another...
                 it is perfectly ok to regulate, limit, police/policy
                video streaming, you just need to disclose it....

                :)

                Regards.

                Faisal Imtiaz
                Snappy Internet & Telecom
                7266 SW 48 Street
                Miami, FL 33155
                Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 <tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232>

                Help-desk: (305)663-5518 <tel:%28305%29663-5518>
                Option 2 or Email: [email protected]

                
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                    *From: *"David Milholen" <[email protected]
                    <mailto:[email protected]>>
                    *To: *[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
                    *Sent: *Monday, June 20, 2016 10:44:45 PM

                    *Subject: *Re: [AFMUG] traffic priorities

                    Ive been on the fence about doing the whole limit
                    per customer thing because of title 2 stuff.

                    But from what I understand you just cant charge
                    the content provider for a faster pipe into your
                    network. I could have it wrong but I have to do
                    what I need to

                    smooth out the traffic.


                    On 6/20/2016 5:13 PM, Darin Steffl wrote:

                        Didn't you just get a Procera in?

                        Limit amount of total streaming media per
                        customer IP to whatever you feel is necessary.
                        It actually helps the overall experience of
                        the customer as video won't max out their
                        entire connection. Do the same with software
                        updates like Apple, Microsoft, Xbox, etc.



                        On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 5:07 PM, David
                        <[email protected]
                        <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

                            Ok, ALL of the BORG

                            I need some insight on what I should do.
                             Currently a majority of our network is
                            routed,static and ospf.
                            We keep a good lock down on our edge
                            routers for bad stuff but
                            I am looking to prioritize traffic based
                            on three groups.
                            Voice,Video and Data.
                            So my question is how should I prioritize
                            Video?
                            A. Limit per customer account
                            B  Limit per Customer Device
                            C. No Limit free for all.

                            Each customer has a QOS limitation set by
                            our radios with available burst.
                            Most of these QOS limitations have no
                            issue with most streaming customers but we
                            have the
                            occasional larger family the blows the top
                            off the larger QOS package we have.
                            It got me to thinking about traffic
                            priority levels.

                            Currently we cannot support a 4k stream
                            unless we give them a PTP link or have an
                            Access point all to themselves.
                            We make it clear that we do not support
                            streams over 20Mbs.

                            What is the best approach for such a mess LOL

                            Thanks
                            Dave



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-- Darin Steffl
                        Minnesota WiFi
                        www.mnwifi.com <http://www.mnwifi.com/>
                        507-634-WiFi
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Skype: Simon_Sonar
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (702) 447-1247
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