On Sat, 14 Jun 2014 06:46:57 Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> For 3G and 4G services, I usually recommend a dedicated modem/router
> device that supports Mobile Broadband using a USB stick -- for instance
> a box running ROOTer [1] (a version of DD-WRT), will be much easier to
> use than trying to get the 3G/4G modem stick operational directly on a
> Linux box.

It's been some years since I used such a 3G/4G modem, since Android 2.3 came 
out with Wifi AP support I haven't had a need for it.  But when I used such 
things I never had any problem.  I used my 3G modem on multiple laptops and 
workstations while tracking Debian/Unstable.

> Besides, I am of the view that the public IP (or carrier
> grade NAT IP), should not be public facing directly on equipment that
> /may/ have any kind of vulnerable component -- that is especially true
> for Windows boxes, but it is also true for other OS (including Mac OS X)
> and of course Linux.

While that's a reasonable point in concept it doesn't seem to apply well here.  
If you use a major distribution like Debian you can easily apply security 
patches and the number of people maintaining it ensures that bugs generally 
get fixed quickly.  If you use a distribution with a smaller user base and few 
developers bugs might not get fixed as quickly.

It seems to me that there are two approaches one could take with regard to a 
firewall box.  One is to run the same distribution as your workstations so you 
are good at managing it.  The other is to run a different distribution in the 
hope that both distributions don't have the same bug, EG you could run Debian 
on your desktop and CentOS on your firewall.

-- 
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