Hi Although I'm not sure they are taking more orders at this time, Turris Omnia just started production
It's based on openwrt and has a community of developers maintaining the firmware therefor allowing automatic update option. I'm waiting for mine ... Otherwise, what about a raspberry pi III with full blown debian and automatic security updates ? that was what I was about to order when I found out about omnia because my linksys doesn't allow enough features for what I want freely yours, Ghyom On Tue, 2016-09-06 at 10:33 +0200, Miguel Tavares wrote: > Hello Max, > > Thx for the reply. APU2 looks interesting more for a home server than > just to serve as a firewall to the home IoT and multimedia devices. > > I was actually looking more into a small router/firewall. I found out > that there's some options, like rooting a small tp-link router I already > own or just buying a router that already comes with OpenWRT by default. > This last options are considerably more affordable (~30€) than an APU2 > (~130€). The possible drawback is that the firmware probably contains > binary blobs (I'm not sure if it does, I couldn't find out yet). > > For home server for now I have a old fan less intel NUC working fine. > When it needs updating a APU2 sure looks like a good option. > > Maybe we FSFE should start a campaign on "free your home network" and > protect your home data (like the free your android). On the other hand.. > time seems to be a resource most of us are running out of to even keep > the "free your android" campaign updated (my bad there too). > > Regards, > Miguel > > On 05-09-2016 23:45, Max Mehl wrote: > > Hi Miguel, > > > > # Miguel Tavares [2016-09-03 10:45 +0200]: > >> I was thinking of finding a device that would allow me to create a wifi > >> network for this home devices (such as TV and what's not), monitor the > >> connections created and have a white list of names and/or IP address > >> that connections would be allowed. > > > > Recently I heard the state of the art is using for example the APU2 > > system by PC Engines, which is a fully Free Software compatible network > > device. For WiFi, PC Engines also sells compatible antennas. You can > > install a network firewall OS like IPFire or pfSense on it which should > > provide all features you mentioned (and lots more!). > > > > Never used it but heard a few good reports about it. > > > > Best, > > Max > > > > _______________________________________________ > Discussion mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list [email protected] https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion
