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    Recommendations When Purchasing A Router?

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    • Fred
      Fred @Woland last edited by

      @woland I have a pretty good linksys that I have been dragging around for years, but recently in my house I upgraded our wifi to a unify system. I would really check them out, they are small, POE and have great range. I have hired stuff from a rental company that also puts a standard trus grip on them so they can be mounted anywhere in a theatre. They do only have a single ethernet port so if you want to use an ethernet network as well you need a switch to go with it. It depends on your use case, but the unify stuff I have used gives me the best wifi, and it expands very nicely if you want to add other nodes for further reach. I picked up an 8 port POE switch so the whole setup is pretty easy and gives me ethernet as well.

      http://www.fredrodrigues.net/
      https://github.com/fred-dev
      OSX 10.15.15 MBP 2019 16" 2.3 GHz 8-Core i9, Radeon Pro 5500M 8 GB, 32g RAM
      Windows 10 7700K, GTX 1080ti, 32g RAM, 2tb raided SSD
      Windows 10 Threadripper 3960x 64g ram, 1tb NVME, rtx 2080ti + rtx2070 super

      Woland 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • Woland
        Woland Tech Staff @Fred last edited by

        @fred

        Thanks for the info! 

        Just to clarify, POE is Power Over Ethernet, yes?

        Best wishes,

        Woland

        TroikaTronix Technical Support
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        | Isadora 2.6.1 + 3 | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s | Macbook Pro (Retina, 15", Mid 2015), macOS 10.11.4, 2.8GHz Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB |

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        • Fred
          Fred last edited by

          Yes, POE is power over ethernet. This means with a POE router you can just connect the units with a single ethernet cable for power and data.

          http://www.fredrodrigues.net/
          https://github.com/fred-dev
          OSX 10.15.15 MBP 2019 16" 2.3 GHz 8-Core i9, Radeon Pro 5500M 8 GB, 32g RAM
          Windows 10 7700K, GTX 1080ti, 32g RAM, 2tb raided SSD
          Windows 10 Threadripper 3960x 64g ram, 1tb NVME, rtx 2080ti + rtx2070 super

          Woland 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • Woland
            Woland Tech Staff @Fred last edited by

            @fred

            Great!

            (Mostly just asking so folks who happen to find this thread in the future get all the info they need.)

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            | Isadora 2.6.1 + 3 | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s | Macbook Pro (Retina, 15", Mid 2015), macOS 10.11.4, 2.8GHz Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB |

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            • Juriaan
              Juriaan Tech Staff last edited by

              Hi there,


              A few things that are important :

              1. Make sure that you buy a Router that can do both 2.4GHz and 5GHz. Arduino stuff mainly can't do 5Ghz at times..
              2. Buy a Router with a Gigabit switch. If you ever wish to connect your network to let's say a motioncapture set, then you need a Gigabit switch for fast data transfer. (Heavy OSC.. Hehehe)
              3. Buy a router that has a great interface. Most of the time you need to use it when you are setting up your network. For example, you wish to give a static IP to your showcomputer so you are sure that when you unplug everthing and set it up at the next venue that it is just a matter of connecting the cables.
              4. If you use the router only for performance work then create a network (hidden) with a simple password so that you can connect your devices on the fly.
              5. HIDE YOUR NETWORK.. We don't want to broadcast something like 'Performance' as our SSID

              Personally I have a Netgear NIGHTHAWK


              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

              Woland 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • 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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                | Isadora 2.6.1 + 3 | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s | Macbook Pro (Retina, 15", Mid 2015), macOS 10.11.4, 2.8GHz Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB |

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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 Link: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/tickets/new
                  TroikaTronix Support Policy: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/solutions/articles/13000064762
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                  | Isadora 2.6.1 + 3 | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s | Macbook Pro (Retina, 15", Mid 2015), macOS 10.11.4, 2.8GHz Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB |

                  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

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • 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

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • 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 2.6.1 + 3 | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s | Macbook Pro (Retina, 15", Mid 2015), macOS 10.11.4, 2.8GHz Intel Core i7, 16GB RAM, Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB |

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                        • bonemap
                          bonemap @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 3 STD/USB 3.2.5 | MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | Mac Studio 2022 M1 Max 32GB | OSX 12.5.1 Monterey

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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 @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 3 STD/USB 3.2.5 | MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | Mac Studio 2022 M1 Max 32GB | OSX 12.5.1 Monterey

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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

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