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youneedhelp

@bell.ca
reply to magnum

[Prices] Re: Rogers is going door-to-door giving 20% discount

call bell and order fibe tv and internnet. let them know how much you spend on rogers. and push them for discounts. the group that is dealing with potential cancels to fibe gives amazing deals. your order needs to be pending to reach this group



magnum

@rogers.com

said by youneedhelp :

call bell and order fibe tv and internnet. let them know how much you spend on rogers. and push them for discounts. the group that is dealing with potential cancels to fibe gives amazing deals. your order needs to be pending to reach this group

I need 2 internet connections as I run my software development business from my home office. I can't have outages as I use a VOIP phone and am in continuous contact with my employees who also work from home. So I have both Rogers (for my business side - 8ms ping for the VOIP and faster speeds 25/2) and Teksavvy (6M/800K w/300GB) for downloading "stuff". I can swap gateways in a few seconds if either goes down which happens.

Next year, once our son leaves for university, my wife and I are seriously considering ditching TV altogether. He's the one who has to have all the sports channels. If we were staying with TV then Fibe might be ideal but given our plans its not worth the hassle.


Stewy
Premium
join:2007-12-12
Kitchener, ON

said by magnum :

I need 2 internet connections

Nice what router are you using ? Dual Wan ?


magnum

@rogers.com

said by Stewy:

said by magnum :

I need 2 internet connections

Nice what router are you using ? Dual Wan ?

Nothing so sophisticated. It's a single network with 2 gateways. I have a DLink 655 (wireless and DHCP turned off) running the Rogers connection with the office computers set to Static IPs with it as their gateway.

I have a DLink 845L running the Teksavvy connection with wireless (Primary and Guest) and DHCP enabled. My torrent box is static IP through it so I can do incoming port forwarding. All other devices such as tablets and visitors are DHCP so they go out through the Teksavvy link. Our Sony Blu-ray player is DHCP so we use the Teksavvy bandwidth for Netflix.

It works great and keeps Internet traffic separated yet I can still print from any device. If Rogers goes down (my work connection) I can just swap gateways on the office PCs OR set to DHCP temporarily.

vincom

join:2009-03-06
Bolton, ON
kudos:1

said by magnum :

said by Stewy:

said by magnum :

I need 2 internet connections

Nice what router are you using ? Dual Wan ?

Nothing so sophisticated. It's a single network with 2 gateways. I have a DLink 655 (wireless and DHCP turned off) running the Rogers connection with the office computers set to Static IPs with it as their gateway.

I have a DLink 845L running the Teksavvy connection with wireless (Primary and Guest) and DHCP enabled. My torrent box is static IP through it so I can do incoming port forwarding. All other devices such as tablets and visitors are DHCP so they go out through the Teksavvy link. Our Sony Blu-ray player is DHCP so we use the Teksavvy bandwidth for Netflix.

It works great and keeps Internet traffic separated yet I can still print from any device. If Rogers goes down (my work connection) I can just swap gateways on the office PCs OR set to DHCP temporarily.

since u seem to be tek savvy, why not use pfsense as it will do automatic failover


magnum

@rogers.com

said by vincom:

since u seem to be tek savvy, why not use pfsense as it will do automatic failover

I'm a software developer and former network engineer. Thanks for the suggestion but I'd have to buy more hardware to run it on for little benefit. And don't tell me to use an old PC.

I already had the routers when I decided to bridge the 2 networks or I might have gone with a dual wan router. Before it was unplug/re-plug stuff to move the modem over. This is good enough.



I'm not kidding, I literally have nowhere to put another PC.

My new development computer has 3 monitors, 23" Asus in portrait, 27" Dell u2711 (2560x1440) landscape , 23" Asus in landscape. This takes up a lot of real estate - my entire desk.

Add in a 2nd full PC, and monitor on a desk in the same room + a table currently containing my old PC and a 19" monitor and 2 Thin Clients with 17" touch displays.

And then another full PC and monitor and desk in another room. Add 2 laptops, 1 netbook, 2 Nexus-7 tablets and an iPad. I don't need anymore hardware thanks, especially the heat they output and the electricity bill!

As it is I have to run a floor fan to push the cool air into the room in the summer as the A/C doesn't cut it in my office. In winter I'm toasty warm! This is always by far the warmest room in the house.

For the amount of time Rogers goes down - maybe 10 minutes every few months it's just not worth it. Besides, I'd like to know it's failed.

Occasionally I'll swap my dev PC over to Teksavvy to do a huge download to save my Rogers bandwidth and then I'll forget I did that until I wonder why the Internet is so slow.



Magnum

Viper359
Premium
join:2006-09-17
Scarborough, ON
Reviews:
·voip.ms

When one of those routers go, consider building a small tiny box, running pfsense. I did it months ago, as I needed to run several static ips via openvpn, to the usa, and each static ip device would easily run 10Mbps streams. Sometimes, 5 devices at once. Hence, I needed something powerful enough to handle it. Yet to see a single consumer grade router hand more than 20-30 Mbps. If you build it right, power costs will be cheap, and cooling will be near non existent. You get the added functionality, which is helpful.



magnum

@rogers.com

Re: [Prices] Re: Rogers is going door-to-door giving 20% discoun

said by Viper359:

When one of those routers go, consider building a small tiny box, running pfsense. I did it months ago, as I needed to run several static ips via openvpn, to the usa, and each static ip device would easily run 10Mbps streams. Sometimes, 5 devices at once. Hence, I needed something powerful enough to handle it. Yet to see a single consumer grade router hand more than 20-30 Mbps. If you build it right, power costs will be cheap, and cooling will be near non existent. You get the added functionality, which is helpful.

Yes, there's lots of options out there. I build all my own hardware (electronics degree). I'm sure the router will die at some point - I've had at least 5 routers die or upgraded over the years. You know, basic router, then wireless, then gigabit ports, then dual band etc.

However, my DLink DIR-655 (N300 with Gigabit ports) seems to have no trouble doing 100Mbps peak + 70Mbps sustained which is what I've seen my 25/2 Rogers connection occasionally do during a speedtest! Also the switch part of it seems to perform pretty well.Maybe a difference is I have the wireless and DHCP turned off and use my new DLink DIR-845L for the DHCP and wireless.

I just ran a test copying a 1.3GB file across the network from my old PC to my new one. I get approx. 105MB/s sustained with Task Manager showing my network card at just over 81% utilization of the Gigabit link. This with my PC linked into the DLink DIR-655 which is then uplinked to a DLink DGS-1005D gigabit switch which the other PC is plugged into. i7-950 (gen 1) @3.06GHz in the old PC and brand new Core i7-4770 @3.4GHz in the new PC. Both using onboard RealTek NICs in Asus motherboards. I used to buy Intel gigabit NICS because the built-in ones were crap. Haven't needed that these last 2 builds using Asus motherboards.

I also went through several routers and switches before I found some that performed properly - that was several years ago so I don't remember what they were but the performance was horrible (20MB/s through a gigabit switch).

Magnum