No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroRouterBOARD 2011UiAS-2HnD tiene la mayoría de las funciones e interfaces de todos nuestros enrutadores inalámbricos. Es impulsado por el nuevo Atheros 600MHz 74K El procesador de red MIPS, tiene 128MB RAM, cinco puertos Gigabit LAN, cinco Puertos LAN Fast Ethernet y jaula SFP (¡módulo SFP no incluido. ). Además, presenta una poderosa (hasta 1W. ) De doble cadena 2.4Ghz 802.11bgn inalámbrico, puerto serie RJ45, puerto microUSB y licencia RouterOS L5.
Braulio
Comentado en México el 12 de octubre de 2023
MUY BUEN PRODUCTO PERO FALTA FACTURA
Kristian Perez Vargas
Comentado en México el 13 de diciembre de 2021
Me resultó un poco decepcionante,trabaja bien, no es tan difícil de configurar pero una simple red de 12 máquinas hace que de cuelgue al menos unas 3 veces al día.. Tengo un router mucho más sencillo que hace lo mismo y no me dió problemas, yo asumi que con este iría todavía mejor pero no. Es bueno, hace lo que tiene que hacer pero es triste que se bloquee las terminales pierdan la conexion tan fácil. Si lo cambio al más sencillo trabaja sin detalles con la misma configuración
Fabián Sánchez carbajal
Comentado en México el 14 de julio de 2019
Un buen equipo burn rendimiento
Exanime
Comentado en Canadá el 3 de abril de 2018
This thing rocks the pants off anything else, including fancy stuff that costs twice as much!I used this to replace my "Dark Knight" and it completely blows anything I have seen out of the water. Yes, they are a bit harder to configure, you need knowledge of networking basics but, not only is learning that stuff totally worth it, it is also not that hard.Some awesome Jamaican dude (TKSJa) made a full series on how-to manage these little beasts... all it took for me was to watch a few of his vids to learn what I needed... I had the whole thing set up (as I wanted, internal wifi network with access to my servers, guest wifi on separate isolated vlan, independent dhcp servers for each network, static ips for wired machines, etc) in 45 minutes.I am extremely happy to have found Mikrotik while researching what to replace my stupid router with... I was about to pull the trigger with Ubiquiti until some comments pointed me here... Ubiquiti is all fine but Mikrotik is like Ubiquiti on steroids while riding a roller coaster!
Jesus
Comentado en España el 9 de diciembre de 2016
El procesador del router tira poco y te obliga a apagar el lcd para ganar recursos en caso de 300 megas, que fluctuan como si de una adsl se tratara... no recomendado para enrutar mas de 150 megas..
P C Satish
Comentado en India el 28 de junio de 2015
What an awesome router!With the burgeoning number of phones, tablets and laptops at home and with a fairly large family at home, it's been really difficult for me to keep track of the bandwidth hogs on my network. Earlier I used Tomato on an Asus RTN12 for this purpose, but it just wasn't stable enough and there was no persistent storage (no USB port and too little free space om Flash/NAND).With the RB2011UiAS plus a few simple queues and static DHCP leases, DL/UL consumption is recorded for each individual device and I can see the trends on an hourly/daily/weekly/monthly/yearly basis. Based on this, each device is being throttled independently :-)I've also enabled transparent proxy (with generous caching configured on a USB memory stick) on the Mikrotik router to reduce internet bandwidth usage and without having to configure each and every device with the proxy details.Wi-Fi signal strength is awesome and covers the entire house (G+2).The LCD has been configured to show PPPoE bandwidth graph always. I'm currently trying to get the router to beep differently whenever certain devices arrive on and leave the Wi-Fi network ;-)The 224 unique IP address that I have recorded attempting to hack my router via Telnet, SSH, Web and HTTP (28,000 attempts over the past two and a half days, yeah that right no typos here!) have been merrily sent to the tarpit via a few simple firewall rules. Maybe I'll flood ping them back with a script if I'm bored ;-)... and I've just scratched the surface.If there is a con (not really so if you're a networking expert), it's that simple things can require quite a iut of head-scratching and googling to get to work. But once you hit the forums and read the Wiki, you'll get it working soon enough.
Bernardcasimir
Comentado en Francia el 19 de abril de 2015
Difficile a parametrer mais bon produit. Nous avons du nous faire aide par un informaticien qui a aussi eu du mal a le parametrer
TofuRobot
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de junio de 2014
I am so amazed with this product. It's powerful, flexible, inside a robust metal case, sports external antennas, USB data access, ability to use web-based configuration, command line configuration, or Windows configuration program, and this even a touchscreen LCD panel built right in!The catch?You will have to learn how to use it. I am a standard user with a desire to tinker, so have been running DD-WRT (custom firmware) for my old WRT-54GL. I found that setup easy to use, even though there are many advanced features available, for the most part I could ignore them. Now, this Mikrotik product made me wonder if purchasing it was a mistake once I booted it up and logged into the interface the first time. There is a "quick set" feature that will preload many standard settings that will turn the Mikrotik router into your basic home router, where you plug in your modem on Ethernet port #1, and the rest of the 9 ports act as your local bridged network. With quick set, you can be up and running in no time, but the setup will be basic... and if you're looking at this router, I know you want to do some fun stuff with it.Want to do DDNS? You'll need a script+schedule to get that working. Want to do some port forwarding? You'll need to 1) allow access through the firewall for whatever port you want to use, and 2) create a NAT rule that handles this incoming connection on that port. Automatic backup to file on local storage + email you a copy? Make a schedule for it. And so on and so forth.This thing seems to be very versatile. So far, everything I want to do can be done, but you can't always assume it will be a simple task... or even straightforward. I know I'm barely tapping the potential of this thing, but as a hobbyist/tinkerer, it's been a good investment. Also, the RouterOS license that you need for this is built in. There are no licensing feeds - just buy the hardware and it works - unlike enterprise-class Cisco products, etc...I read that power users (e.g. those used to the aforementioned Cisco products) will have no problem adjusting to RouterOS. It's different, but if you are already messing with the high-class gear, you probably have a good idea of what you're doing. For basic users like me, it was more of a fun project, but can clearly see the potential of this device.Also, if you need help, the Mikrotik community is great. I've received so many scripting tips and troubleshooting techniques just by browsing the forums.Just take it slow and get to know the router. Treat it with respect and invest some time into it - it's different than what you're used to, but that's okay. You might even form a long lasting bond with this amazing piece of tech, ha! :)
Productos recomendados