They do this for a reason. With other consumer brands, you usually get either less stability or fewer features (often both). And consumer-grade equipment is what 90% of people actually need. You don’t need to be a fanboy to understand that.What I have a problem with is people coming in and going "get an ASUS! problem solved" in almost every thread
I'm actually thinking that I may be able to use them again in a future Omada setup (they're EAP245s) if I pickup an Omada gateway.
I’m also potentially interested in UniFi
3. Email notifications when switching WANs
At least it's still more related to the original topic (comparing different routers) than 80% of the messages in the thread that exist only because some person can't stand ASUSYou are hijacking the thread with your requirements.
I'm not looking for the exact match but rather for an option that includes everything I need in ASUS and maybe even more. ASUS was a clear upgrade in every aspect compared to cheap Chinese routers like TP-Link, for example.The only 1:1 match to your RT-BE88U with Asuswrt-Merlin is another RT-BE88U with Asuswrt-Merlin.
I switched from Android to iOS in 2019. Why not sooner? Because the early iOS versions were too basic and restrictive for me. There wasn't even a built-in file manager. I decided to switch when iOS became good enough to suit my needs and even better. For example, I don't need to run a local VPN-based ad blocker like AdGuard for Android because Safari has a native Content Blocking API, and it's a clear win for me. So I'm curious if the current state of UniFi is rather similar to old iOS versions or new ones.Think about switching from Android to iOS or vice versa.
only because some person can't stand ASUS
Still a better argument than post #3 - a childish scream "No, not ASUS!" with zero arguments, and all the following posts from the same person that expressed hatred and nothing more. That was what I was referring to, not your posts, which are usually pragmatic and well-argued.This sounds like "my car is the best I ever had", basically saying nothing.
Agree. Most people think that a router is a thing that shares Wi-Fi. They buy cheap Chinese junk for $30-50 and then blame their ISPs when that thing starts dropping connections and capping bandwidth. I have witnessed this a million times.A home router with 100 features and replaced firmware is NOT what most people on the consumer market would want.
It works the same way for ASUS. The only difference is that it really works that way and provides more features out of the box than other consumer brands. For a long time, I was using the stock firmware and switched to Merlin because of the native support for NextDNS DoH and a few useful features for my home server setup.The best router for most is the one they bring home, plug in and it starts working close to the way it says on the box.
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