System Error Message
Part of the Furniture
While i was browsing for firmware updates I spotted a router based on the qualcomm IPQ-8064.
Block diagram
http://i.mt.lv/routerboard/files/RB3011UiAS-151124114519.png
http://routerboard.com/RB3011UiAS-RM
It has usb3 and a lot of ethernet ports. For the price i think it is a good deal considering you get a touchscreen and if you want a qualcomm dual core ARM based router running at 1.4 Ghz with but broadcom has already beaten it with their 64 bit chips. I hope this version of routerboard would have much better NAS capability if you ever hope for decent NAS from routerOS.
Looking at the block diagram it has 10 ethernet ports divided among 2 switches and an SFP port. It does have a better internal wiring design than many switched based routers and SFP which makes it great for fibre optics so you wont need a modem if you can find a compatible SFP module (you can try asking your ISP for the module instead of a modem).
I still think it does better than other current ARM based routers except the broadcom 64 bit dual dual cores. I would expect realistic speeds to be the 25 ip filter rules for NAT. At the very least it wont be as buggy as many of the routers using the same CPU such as google's stuff. They might release a version with wifi in the future but i wouldnt expect much in wifi seeing the router line's history if you look at their naming scheme.
Block diagram
http://i.mt.lv/routerboard/files/RB3011UiAS-151124114519.png
http://routerboard.com/RB3011UiAS-RM
It has usb3 and a lot of ethernet ports. For the price i think it is a good deal considering you get a touchscreen and if you want a qualcomm dual core ARM based router running at 1.4 Ghz with but broadcom has already beaten it with their 64 bit chips. I hope this version of routerboard would have much better NAS capability if you ever hope for decent NAS from routerOS.
Looking at the block diagram it has 10 ethernet ports divided among 2 switches and an SFP port. It does have a better internal wiring design than many switched based routers and SFP which makes it great for fibre optics so you wont need a modem if you can find a compatible SFP module (you can try asking your ISP for the module instead of a modem).
I still think it does better than other current ARM based routers except the broadcom 64 bit dual dual cores. I would expect realistic speeds to be the 25 ip filter rules for NAT. At the very least it wont be as buggy as many of the routers using the same CPU such as google's stuff. They might release a version with wifi in the future but i wouldnt expect much in wifi seeing the router line's history if you look at their naming scheme.