The likes:
it works. I ultimately found every setting I needed and every setting does what it needs to do.
The not so liked stuff:
- Controller software is clunky: the installer is HUGE and then I have to install Java & DB server on top of that
- Running the controller software is clunky as well: it closes to system tray, but opening a new instance just fails instead of opening the existing instance
- Adding new APs is really trivial, but you have to go to "unrecognised devices" pane to add it. Clearly it was developed with huge sites in mind, but the target audience are home and SOHO...
- Really, I need to emphasise how easy extending my network coverage is now: You just connect a new AP. A minute later it's in the "unrecognised devices" list and you just click "adopt". Ta-da!!!
- I'm wondering if I could just as easily add a wireless-only range extender? I'll need to look that up because I really can't get a PoE cable to that particular location all that easily...
- Configuring devices is clunky: it opens a side bar approx one third of screen width wide. But that side bar then contains multiple tabs and subsections. Really it would require to be full-screen, but for some reason they leave the list showing while it's practically useless, except for opening another device, which then replaces content of the already opened side bar.
- Configuring port forwarding is done somewhere three levels deep in the menus. I had to ask the Allknowing about where I might find it. And then it had three subsections I never heard about yet, so I wasn't sure I succeeded until it actually started working. Started in the wrong section, of course.
- Static DHCP leases are also not handled in a single list, but for each individual device. I managed to mistype the IP C-segment once. Took me an hour of debugging why that printer wouldn't connect... With a special list of issues constantly nagging about this and that, there might have been an entry saying I might have mistyped a static IP there too?
- etc, etc. The software is built with a completely different mentality than anything consumer-based I used since my WRT54GL. And it's completely different from Mikrotik's "pro" design. I quote pro because I really don't know, but I'm also using Cisco's 300 series managed switches that practically mirror MikroTik, TP-link's managed switches, Ubiquiti managed switches, etc. Well, maybe this design matches most the Ubiquity design - also with a separate controller and stuff. So it would seem there are (so far) three different approaches in configuration design. And I just stumbled upon the one that I dislike the most - I never liked Ubiquity configuration either. I just don't see why a separate controller software would be necessary when all of these devices are already running the stuff... I also should have bought the controller box - it was really offputting installing java on my windows again. Maybe I should have installed it on the ubuntu server, but I had a hunch it's a visual thing and I would have had issues with that since my server is headless... I'll never know: if I ever need to move this, I'll buy the box first... Or use a RPi for it...
Anyway, so far so good. I'm happy with my choice. I'll check if I can get 2.4 GHz cover the lacking spots any better and then just move my wife there. Otherwise, I'll see about a range extender...