raleighthings
Occasional Visitor
Looking for the following options.
30/10mpbs minimum speed supported. That's the link we have now.
Larger LAN subnet than a /24.
Dual WAN support would be nice but not required.
Support for multiple 1to1 WAN/NAT setups.
WAN pass through would be nice.
The ability to support VPNs with built in clients for Mac, Win, iPads, iPhones, Androids, etc... with a slight preference to SSL. Slight. Blackberry support would also be nice. But I want to avoid router vendor client requirements if possible. I keep seeing way too many Wait 3 to 6 months for the client update before you update your OS.
This is for an architectural office. Currently we run a mail and external FTP/Web/WebDAV file server for sharing things with the outside world. But we want to start allowing staff to access some of our currently internal only services via VPN setups. Plus take advantage of our current speed.
Any suggestions?
From my reading most routers aimed at smaller businesses don't support a LAN bigger than /24 and it's a bear to find that detail in the literature.
TIA
30/10mpbs minimum speed supported. That's the link we have now.
Larger LAN subnet than a /24.
Dual WAN support would be nice but not required.
Support for multiple 1to1 WAN/NAT setups.
WAN pass through would be nice.
The ability to support VPNs with built in clients for Mac, Win, iPads, iPhones, Androids, etc... with a slight preference to SSL. Slight. Blackberry support would also be nice. But I want to avoid router vendor client requirements if possible. I keep seeing way too many Wait 3 to 6 months for the client update before you update your OS.
This is for an architectural office. Currently we run a mail and external FTP/Web/WebDAV file server for sharing things with the outside world. But we want to start allowing staff to access some of our currently internal only services via VPN setups. Plus take advantage of our current speed.
Any suggestions?
From my reading most routers aimed at smaller businesses don't support a LAN bigger than /24 and it's a bear to find that detail in the literature.
TIA