![]() ![]() It’s simple, it’s feature rich, and given what Open Mesh hardware costs, the entire paradigm is an absolute steal compared to pricing and complexity of enterprise solutions that masquerade as SMB-friendly. CloudTrax is a pretty decent network management system in and of itself, and it is the only way you manage Open Mesh components. If you are not familiar with Open Mesh, the operational paradigm is easy- you buy your components (routers, switches, and access points), you register them in the CloudTrax dashboard, and off you go with configuration and operation. Yes, you heard me right… I said “with no license costs”. Now customers can use access points, switches, and the G200 all from Open Mesh, and all cloud-managed in the excellent CloudTrax dashboard with no license costs. It has a list price of $249 dollars, and it also brings the Open Mesh product line into the proverbial “full stack” domain. Those ports are part of the G200, which is the first router ever released by Open Mesh. Open Mesh Brings Major Disruption to SMB Space, Goes Full-StackĪnother router coming to the SMB market generally isn’t that exciting, but this one is different for a number of reasons.įor one thing, it comes from Open Mesh. This entry was posted in 802.11ac, Cloud Networking, Linksys, Open-Mesh, Tanaza, Ubiquiti, Wi-Fi, Wireless Networking, WLAN on Decemby wirednot. An outdoor AP option with external antenna capabilities would also be nice. Even Open Mesh, before they were acquired by Datto, had a pretty effective cloud managed switch and edge router offering to go with their wireless APs, as does Ubiquiti- who is always the elephant in the room in this space. But I also can’t help but think that sooner or later “cloud managed Wi-Fi only” is going to be an issue for some potential customers. All that sounds good when you can get it for cheap with no licenses, and I will say that the Tanaza access point I’ve been running works well. ![]() ![]() Linksys Cloud Management 2.0 promises unlimited scaling (again, think MSP), easy pre-configurations and new access point adds (think Meraki-style), and has a good road map for options that will help customers to either directly or indirectly monetize their guest WLAN environments. In my opinion, many of the bigger guys have gotten so license-happy they have priced themselves out of the SMB market. And what makes those prices compelling? Probably the biggest selling point is that no licenses are required when you compare to other cloud-managed solutions. The Linksys empire includes manufacturing, support, various channel relationships, and the ability to capitalize on Tanaza’s native cloud goodness to offer a decent SMB solution at compelling prices. The case can be made that Foxconn/Belkin/Linksys using Tanaza’s framework validates Tanaza’s suitability for the SMB/MSP masses. ![]() Tanaza has the cloud-management thing down pretty well. With its latest strategy for cloud-managed WLAN, Linksys replaces it’s old in-house magic with Tenaza’s very polished dashboard and management framework and pairs it with a so-far modest handful of decent indoor 802.11ac wireless access points. You of a certain age may be pre-disposed to think of Linksys as a home router vendor, but the company has long since evolved to having business-grade products in several spaces. By switching to Tanaza, the cloud-based network management platform, you can manage unlimited APs and networks from the cloud, centralize all your networks in a single platform, and scale networks as needed.As a reminder, Linksys is part of Belkin, which is part of Foxconn.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |