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UniFi Dream Machine Special Edition

Ubiquiti - UniFi Dream Machine Special Edition

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AncientGeek00 • 7 months ago

You would want a cloud gateway of some sort. The UDM Pro Max or SE are solid choices. You will want a PoE switch if you start with the Pro Max since it has better specs, but doesn’t offer native PoE ports. Then you will want APs of some sort. WiFi 6 or WiFi 7…often the latter requires more power, so the SE might not have enough power for many WiFi 7 APs. The Pro APs are nice and the U6-Mesh is a nice table top AP. The product names are sometimes misleading, so read the specs…or ask here.

r/Ubiquiti • Upgrading home router/wifi ->
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AncientGeek00 • 5 months ago

You can easily do this with Ubiquiti UniFi gateways. Often we create a different SSID for IoT and just turn on 2.4GHz for that SSID. Turn off 5GHz etc.

r/wifi • Recommended router that lets you create separate 2.4 and 5 bands ->
Positive
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AutoRotate0GS • 11 months ago

Ubiquity is great value with enterprise features. Dream Machines. Best if you use the whole platform with APs and stuff

r/HomeNetworking • Router recommendations for Fios ->
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AutoRotate0GS • 11 months ago

I’m not so familiar with home equipment over 1gig, but i think some of the Dream Machine products do that. I’ve had a couple versions of Ubiquity, most recent the regular Dream machine…the round one that looks like a coffee can. I’m an enterprise guy and this thing has really nice features and visibility right in the phone app. Surely does more than your typical linksys and other residential devices. For that space it should be fine alone with its built in wifi6. Check Amazon.

r/HomeNetworking • Router recommendations for Fios ->
Positive
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botpa-94027 • 12 months ago

Ubiquti dream machine. Best choice I've made and I went through all of those consumer devices

r/HomeNetworking • "Best" consumer router under $200? ->
Positive
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ChachMcGach • 6 months ago

Do not put a deco mesh system into your 32,000 sqft mansion.  You should be looking at higher end systems like UniFi, HpE, Ruckus. I’m not super familiar with engenius.  You need a centrally managed system and with an estate of this size a high end system will be a drop in the bucket of your build budget.

r/HomeNetworking • Wireless AP or Mesh w/ Ethernet backhaul for 32,000 sqft home ->
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ChachMcGach • 6 months ago

Yeah. I did. Along with hpe and ruckus. A number of my wealthy clients specifically request UniFi and in my experience they stay happy with it and I rarely have to touch anything. It’s also commonly used at resorts, hotels, etc What’s your beef with UniFi?

r/HomeNetworking • Wireless AP or Mesh w/ Ethernet backhaul for 32,000 sqft home ->
Positive
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clear831 • 9 months ago

Dream machine should be able to cover everything. Maybe an express can as well and they can be had used for $80

r/HomeNetworking • Which router is the best value for a 2,000 sq ft house with 40 devices (mostly Google Home and Eufy cameras), one TV, and no gaming? Internet speed is 150Mpbs (cable). ->
Positive
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davenelsondotcom • 4 months ago

The question comes down to how much you want to mess with your router? Personally I don't want to mess with it at all, so I went with the Dream Machine along with UniFi access points and switches. It took me 20 hours or so to learn how to set it up correctly and now it has been running for 7 years or so. I have a pair of Raspberry Pis running Ad Guard and act as my network's DNS. Another Pi running Home Assistant with a lot of radios and such plugged into it. Other than keeping them up to date with the latest firmware and software I don't really think about my network at all anymore. Until I want to that is.

r/synology • Which WIFI router are you using? ->
Positive
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DazzzASTER • about 1 month ago

Ubiquiti. It is well worth the investment. You need a Dream Machine and then a handful of access points depending on house size.

r/HENRYUKLifestyle • Wifi Routers ->
Positive
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Downtown-Reindeer-53 • 8 months ago

UniFi, hands down. I don't know what you consider "similar nonsense", - prosumer and a lot of business will use a controller that manages the configurations and statistics. The Cloud Key is a somewhat older implementation of the UniFi setup where it performed as the controller and an NVR for cameras. They've split that off - you can get gateways (router/controller) that does not have the video incorporated any longer. The "cloud" in some of their hardware doesn't mean it's run from the cloud or whatever, it's simply part of the model name. You can run it all standalone without being tied to their servers (though it's pretty convenient at times). Similarly, they have "mesh" in the name of some of their APs - but all of them can be wirelessly uplinked. It's a matter of them associating through marketing to the massive consumer "mesh" marketing. But it's still prosumer stuff and uses the same controller as the rest. My favorite feature is reliability. It's been rock solid for me through 6 years (I've moved through three upgrades and it's just stable. I love it. Look at the Dream Router 7, UniFi Express models, and Cloud Gateway models for some pretty darned good home solutions. The Dream Machines are great also, they are rack mount though and tilt towards having the video features. Should you choose one of the simpler offerings and want to go video later - there are standalone DVRs - including the Cloud Key+, which is still popular - that you can add. There is other prosumer gear, but Ubiquiti UniFi and TP-Link Omada are the only ones I know of with the unified management.

r/HomeNetworking • Prosumer wifi router recommendations? ->
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Downtown-Reindeer-53 • 8 months ago

UniFi, hands down. I don't know what you consider "similar nonsense", - prosumer and a lot of business will use a controller that manages the configurations and statistics. The Cloud Key is a somewhat older implementation of the UniFi setup where it performed as the controller and an NVR for cameras. They've split that off - you can get gateways (router/controller) that does not have the video incorporated any longer. The "cloud" in some of their hardware doesn't mean it's run from the cloud or whatever, it's simply part of the model name. You can run it all standalone without being tied to their servers (though it's pretty convenient at times). Similarly, they have "mesh" in the name of some of their APs - but all of them can be wirelessly uplinked. It's a matter of them associating through marketing to the massive consumer "mesh" marketing. But it's still prosumer stuff and uses the same controller as the rest. My favorite feature is reliability. It's been rock solid for me through 6 years (I've moved through three upgrades and it's just stable. I love it. Look at the Dream Router 7, UniFi Express models, and Cloud Gateway models for some pretty darned good home solutions. The Dream Machines are great also, they are rack mount though and tilt towards having the video features. Should you choose one of the simpler offerings and want to go video later - there are standalone DVRs - including the Cloud Key+, which is still popular - that you can add. There is other prosumer gear, but Ubiquiti UniFi and TP-Link Omada are the only ones I know of with the unified management.

r/HomeNetworking • Prosumer wifi router recommendations? ->
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Downtown-Reindeer-53 • 8 months ago

I'd suggest looking into Ubiquiti UniFi. Since you have wiring available, it would be ideal. Look at the Cloud Gateway Ultra or Max as the router/controller, and add switches and wifi APs as needed/possible. You'll get a single-point-of-management interface for all the hardware. The Dream Router 7 is nice in that it has an AP built in if that's needed. The Dream Machine rack mounted hardware is also great, it may be overkill for you though.

r/HomeNetworking • What networking system should I use? ->
Positive
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egosumumbravir • about 2 months ago

Function split 👍👍👍 One Unifi Cloud Gateway Fibre, along with a U7-Pro hanging from the ceiling being powered off the CGF's POE+ port.

r/openwrt • Need router recommendation (2.5G, SFP, Wi-Fi 7) ->

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