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Ask HN: Best Small Company (~25-50 Users) Router Setup?

10 pointsby ghemptonover 9 years ago
Without resulting to hiring an IT consultant, what would be a good wireless routing hardware setup for a company in a single office with around 25-50 employees?

5 comments

jrronimoover 9 years ago
Are you looking to just bridge people wireless -&gt; wired connections or do you want something akin to a home router setup that handles DHCP and firewalling?<p>Either way, having too many devices connected to the same (single) radio can make it hard for any traffic to get through. A brief overview on airtime is here: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;reviews&#x2F;wi-fi-performance,2985-14.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;reviews&#x2F;wi-fi-performance,2985-1...</a> -- in your situation, a minimum of two access points would be a good idea.<p>If you&#x27;re looking for just access points, then I&#x27;d recommend a 3-pack of Ubiquiti UAP-Pros, spaced out relatively evenly around your work environment: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Ubiquiti-Networks-UniFi-Enterprise-System&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B005EORRBW&#x2F;ref=sr_1_2&#x2F;179-7464592-6881757?ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1440441047&amp;sr=8-2&amp;keywords=3-pack+uap+pro&amp;pebp=1440441054430&amp;perid=1S7NYFRMRZ1MEKJM033B" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Ubiquiti-Networks-UniFi-Enterprise-Sys...</a> -- configuring them requires free server software, but once they&#x27;re up and running, the server software can be shut down and the devices can run independently.<p>I recommend these as a Ubiquiti enterprise certified person with a current deployment of 30 UAP-ACs, on my way up to about 80 devices in total. I have one auditorium room with about 200 seats that, so far, 3 access points seem to cover without trouble.
sumodirjoover 9 years ago
I use Ruckus (3 AP) in the office and the performance is good for 50+ people. Remember that every person at least bring two devices (laptop + mobile phone) to the office, some of them bring 2 mobile phones plus tablet. make sure you count that too when sizing the WiFi.<p>Meraki is easy to setup and manage, it does not use any controller on premise since the AP connect to Meraki Cloud. You can manage all your Meraki AP from single dashboard even if you have separate physical location. This including user management so you don&#x27;t have to only rely on WPA2 for WiFi security<p>Regarding the AP itself, if budget allowed make sure the device support 802.11 AC, most new devices support this (CMIIW) this run on 5Ghz band which on most places less crowded than 2.4Ghz. Usually this kind of device support dual band with 2,4Ghz to also support<p>At the very least make sure the AP you will buy support dual band 5Ghz (802.11 N) and also 2.4Ghz (b&#x2F;g&#x2F;n).<p>Most dual band support feature like band steering (this might be ruckus term, but others should have similar feature). Basically the AP will offer the 5Ghz to any device want to connect to them first, if the device can&#x27;t connect then they will offer 2.4Ghz band. Having people connected to 5Ghz band is improving the network performance that people get because less inteference in this band.
_mgrover 9 years ago
What&#x27;s the area of the office and what barriers exist between employees? Concrete or internal metal&#x2F;plaster walls? Other offices &#x2F; businesses near by where the employees pick up the SSID&#x27;s with full or near full strength?<p>I&#x27;ve found older Apple Airport Extreme&#x27;s work really well and are easy to setup and manage. I can&#x27;t personally comment on the current version.
theklubover 9 years ago
If we&#x27;re just talking about access points then check out Meraki&#x27;s from Cisco.
15155over 9 years ago
Mikrotik Routers.<p>Ubiquiti APs (and routers, if you like, but they&#x27;re way more limited)<p>Or Meraki, if you have lots of money.