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    Recommendations When Purchasing A Router?

    Hardware
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    • Woland
      Woland Tech Staff @Juriaan last edited by

      @juriaan

      Thanks for the info! Its great to collect all of this information in one place for forum users.

      Best wishes,

      Woland

      TroikaTronix Technical Support
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      • Woland
        Woland Tech Staff last edited by

        Hello all,

        For the sake of my own knowledge, and the benefit of future forum-users who run across this thread:

        Further research has me asking the question, "Active or Passive POE?"

        Anyone care to shed light on this? Active looks to be more common, so that is what I am leaning towards.



        @Fred @Juriaan 

        I would love to know the make and model #'s of the routers that you mention if you have the time to check at some point.



        Best wishes,

        Woland

        TroikaTronix Technical Support
        New Support Ticket: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/tickets/new
        Support Policy: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/solutions/articles/13000064762
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        Professional Services: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/solutions/articles/13000109444

        | Isadora Version: all of them | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s |

        bonemap 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Juriaan
          Juriaan Tech Staff last edited by

          The thing with POE (Power over Ethernet) is that not a lot of devices support it. Personally I'm more for a switch that can deliver POE and just connect a Ethernet cable from my router to it.

          Also I don't know a lot of routers that actually support 'POE' out of the box..

          Isadora 3.1.1, Dell XPS 17 9710, Windows 10
          Interactive Performance Designer, Freelance Artist, Scenographer, Lighting Designer, TroikaTronix Community moderator
          Always in for chatting about interaction in space / performance design. Drop me an email at hello@juriaan.me

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          • Juriaan
            Juriaan Tech Staff last edited by

            I have a Nighthawk R7000 btw and a few smaller ones that I use in installations. (40 bucks TPLINK)

            Isadora 3.1.1, Dell XPS 17 9710, Windows 10
            Interactive Performance Designer, Freelance Artist, Scenographer, Lighting Designer, TroikaTronix Community moderator
            Always in for chatting about interaction in space / performance design. Drop me an email at hello@juriaan.me

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            • Woland
              Woland Tech Staff last edited by

              I suppose I'm talking both switches (more common to have POE) and routers at this point 

              TroikaTronix Technical Support
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              | Isadora Version: all of them | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s |

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              • bonemap
                bonemap Izzy Guru @Woland last edited by bonemap

                @woland

                I am just asking the question how POE would be useful for an Isadora installation? My only experience with POE is as an end user of a corporate telephone system. Other than that, I believe some video extenders and IOT systems use POE. Could it be useful for running micro controllers such as Arduino’s? Is it something that is going to become more common or needed?

                Best wishes,

                Bonemap

                 

                http://bonemap.com | Australia
                Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
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                • Juriaan
                  Juriaan Tech Staff @bonemap last edited by

                  @bonemap

                  Hi there Bonemap,

                  I use a POE Switch for powering my motion capture camera's (https://optitrack.com/) and I have to say that in the industry I see a lot of small devices that can actually use POE (Camera's, Artnet Receivers, etc). 

                  Ofcourse you can attach an arduino to a POE if you want too, the thing is that you need to make sure how much power is actually being send to your arduino, and convert it if necassary.

                  Isadora 3.1.1, Dell XPS 17 9710, Windows 10
                  Interactive Performance Designer, Freelance Artist, Scenographer, Lighting Designer, TroikaTronix Community moderator
                  Always in for chatting about interaction in space / performance design. Drop me an email at hello@juriaan.me

                  bonemap 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • bonemap
                    bonemap Izzy Guru @Juriaan last edited by bonemap

                    @Juriaan 

                    Ah OK, so these are specific purpose cameras that work in an array? I guess surveillance style systems would also use POE. I don’t see a lot of gear like that. But I can imagine it would be very useful to have plug and play networked devices with POE.

                    Thanks for your insight.

                    Best wishes

                    Bonemap 

                    http://bonemap.com | Australia
                    Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                    MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
                    Mac Studio 2023 M2 Ultra 128GB | OSX 15.3 Sequoia
                    A range of deployable older Macs

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                    • Juriaan
                      Juriaan Tech Staff last edited by

                      Exactly. Systems like surveillance camera's also use it. Basically most small networked devices have a version that is POE enabled.

                      Isadora 3.1.1, Dell XPS 17 9710, Windows 10
                      Interactive Performance Designer, Freelance Artist, Scenographer, Lighting Designer, TroikaTronix Community moderator
                      Always in for chatting about interaction in space / performance design. Drop me an email at hello@juriaan.me

                      Paz 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Paz
                        Paz Beta Tester @Juriaan last edited by

                        @juriaan @fred @woland @bonemap @everyone I hope you don't mind me bumping this thread, I found the information extremely useful, but seeing as it's been 8 years since this has been discussed I wonder what new developments I should consider.

                        I primarily work in an education setting, and I would like to be able to create my own local network for wired and wireless access. 

                        I'm using Mac computers (Isadora), Arduino and Pipo interfaces, Birddog cameras (controlled via the VISCA PTZ actor), Luxonis Oak-D camera (POE), audio sent over Dante, plus NDI and OSC.

                        Can I purchase a router with multiple poe ethernet ports which also offers wireless connection with good range, or do I invest in a wireless router and a separate switch? Hoping for your recommendations.

                        Many thanks for everyone's help.

                        Best wishes, Simon

                        Simon Powell: Researching Emerging Technologies in Live Performance at University of the Arts London.
                        Running: Mac Studio M1 Max 32GB, 512GB SSD, macOS 15.5 | MacBook Pro M2 Pro 16GB, 512GB SSD, macOS 15.5 / Izzy v4.09 /// UK

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