If you are going to be under siege, you can run a Linux firewall box with 3
interfaces directly from your cable box, we are doing a presentation/lab at
HackFest the 2nd Saturday (next weekend) at UAT.edu.
It will give you vpn, pptp, whatever you want?
And you can populate it with 1000G network interfaces.
You can purchase the box and the cards for about $150.
Course, if you don't think you will be terribly under seige, like a security
professional or woman might be, you can get a WRT54 and put openwrt on it. But
this is not for the slight - it's a wee small linux box all command line.
At least the FOSS Firewall box iso's configured as secure as say any Coyote
Point, or Juniper Os firewall, have easy peasy little configuration wizards
that are not too difficult to understand.
Do the math? Return on investment. Do you want a small arm processor with
8/32GB, and 10/100 interfaces that, when hit with a distributed nmap attack
(spoofed to originate from China) will fall over and let $badpeople either do
remote management, auth access, or remote firmware update.... so that the
machine never works right, you get rats in all your walls on all your boxes,
when you can build and protect with a Pentium class system with an enterprise
open source firewall?
It's just a DHCP that is passed off from the cable company, and another clue,
you don't have to get a "cable" modem and a "router" - products exist that do
both - including a linux box - but that's for the advanced class.
Obnosis | (503)754-4452
PLUG Linux Security Labs 2nd Saturday Each mo...@noon - 3PM
Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2009 17:19:01 -0700
Subject: Re: router opinions wanted
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
ck out Netgear I've had good luck with them...
On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 3:54 PM, Robert Holtzman <[email protected]> wrote:
Total noob wrt networks. I'm about to dive into setting up a home LAN
and could use some opinions/advise/warnings/ideas about routers. Not
sure yet whether the LAN will be wireless or not.
Any routers to look for? Any to avoid?
Is it possible to disable a wireless router's transmitter and use it
with cable? I thought I might like to try it as hard wired but
retain the capability of going wireless later. I've run a lot of
searches on this question and haven't seen anything.
--
Bob Holtzman
"If you think you're getting free lunch,
check the price of the beer"
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Best Regards,
Lynn P. Tilby
Ph: 480 632-8635
[email protected]
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