[MLB-WIRELESS] Meraki Mini

Peter Buncle peter at nmc.net.au
Fri Mar 16 20:57:51 EST 2007


Hi All,

Also consider the ASUS wl500g premium - a great powerfull access point
With mini pci radio & usb 2 ! (266 mhz cpu , 32 meg ram, 8 meg flash)

I've standardized on these units now.

I've seen them as low as $120 new , but you should be able to get them
about $150 without too much trouble.

Cheers

Peter 
NodeGUR


-----Original Message-----
From: melbwireless-bounces at wireless.org.au
[mailto:melbwireless-bounces at wireless.org.au] On Behalf Of Phil k
Sent: Friday, 16 March 2007 5:26 PM
To: melbwireless at melbournewireless.org.au
Subject: Re: [MLB-WIRELESS] Meraki Mini

Fair enough, yeah i always like playing around with a new piece of gear
so i 
might still consider getting one. But i will soon be moving to Taylors
Hill 
and i will want to connect to a node, but to connect to a node i think i

will buy a wrt54gl or another buffalo whr hp 54g if i can track one
down.




>From: "Dan Flett" <conhoolio at hotmail.com>
>To: hakzor_x1 at hotmail.com, melbwireless at melbournewireless.org.au
>Subject: RE: [MLB-WIRELESS] Meraki Mini
>Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2007 17:20:59 +1100
>
>>Has anyone used a meraki mini? I am thinking of getting one however i 
>>would
>>like to know some peoples past experiences with the unit, before i
order
>>one.
>
>Hi Phil,
>
>It depends on what you want to use it for.  If you want to hack/play
with a 
>new piece of gear, then I'd recommend buying one.  Buying just one from

>Meraki is a bit expensive though.
>
>They are a purpose-built router/AP for mesh networking.  They come with
a 
>firmware that is designed to propogate Internet Access across the mesh
with 
>little or no configuration.  It's very good for distributing Internet 
>Access to all nodes on the network, but maybe not so good for a network

>where the nodes want to communicate with each other.
>
>My personal opinion of the Merakis is that they are the future of
Community 
>Networking in Australia, but not quite yet.  Here I envision them being

>used with Freifunk/OpenWRT, rather than the Meraki firmware.  The
Meraki 
>vendor firmware doesn't take into account the strict government
regulations 
>that surround the distribution of Internet in Australia.  It also
doesn't 
>seem to consider that nodes on the network might want to communicate
with 
>each other directly - but this needs to be tested.  The firmware
certainly 
>doesn't care anything about the Melbourne Wireless IP Address
allocation 
>system - if we used it on our network we'd run into all sorts of IP 
>addressing issues.
>
>Installing OpenWRT on the Meraki is a difficult, user-unfriendly
process at 
>the moment.  So the first big hurdle is sorting this out.  Reading the 
>OpenWRT forums tells me that the OpenWRT Developers intend to write a
new 
>"stage2" bootloader for the Meraki that will make it a lot easier to
load 
>new firmware images.  Unfortunately I haven't heard much on this front 
>lately - I hope they haven't forgotten about it...
>
>Once this is sorted, we would want to get Freifunk or similar ported to

>OpenWRT Kamikaze - plans for this are already afoot.  So by the time 
>OpenWRT is properly ported to the Meraki, we might be able to use 
>Kamikaze/Freifunk straight away.
>
>Cheers,
>
>Dan
>
>

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