Quote from Landis82:Winston, what would you suggest as a recommendation for a WIRED Router for my desktop application?
I have a trusty old AirLink Router that has served me well over the years, but I think it might be time to upgrade.
Am running a Dell Precision T3400 along with a new XPS-8300 as my backup.
Am a remote trader using basic broadband.
Am tempted by the Mikrotick RB450G
or the new RB2011L for $99.
Thanks!
I recommend that people look at the Linksys RV042 and RV082 routers. They are small business grade and they can be had on eBay for less than $100. (For a point of reference they go for $200-$400 new these days.) They are 10/100 routers - not full gigabit - that is why they are so cheap but also 99% of america has less than 100 megabit internet at their home or office.
I also tell people another word of advice: Allow each device to do it's intended job well rather than ask it to do the job of three different things poorly. If you have a router use it for routing, let the switch do the switching and let a wireless access point handle your wifi traffic. If you try to buy one of those "all in one" combo devices you will sacrifice and compromise on each category and end up losing overall.
Most people own a decent wireless router in their home. Keep it and keep using it exactly as you are. Buy a solid wired-only router to connect to your ISP with (like the Cisco/Linksys RV042 or RV082) and let that be your main firewall/router between you and the outside world. Those routers are plenty fast enough to handle sustained downloads from Netflix or iTunes all day long. Keep in mind that the most bandwidth I have ever seen a trader use (he was running 8 strategies, each pulling market data and sending orders all at once) was during the flash crash and it was only 17mb/second sustained with a spike up to 28mb/sec. Your kids (or wife) aren't going to be pulling down movies from Netflix during the day so you are good on that front.
Keeping in line with letting each device do it's own job well (and this is industry best practices in the networking world) buy a decent switch and don't connect any individual machines to your router. The router/Firewall sits between you and the outside world and the "stuff" all connects to the switch.
It should be:
Internet/ISP >> Your router >>> Your Switch and Your Wifi
You can connect your wireless router (your new wireless access point) directly to your router or you can connect it to your switch. Either are fine. Plug your computers, storage devices, printers, TV's, refrigerators, thermostats, lights & security systems, etc. (yes all that stuff now connects to the internet) plug all that stuff into the switch.
I like the Dell PowerConnect 2708 and 2716 switches (the 2724 is awesome too but has a fan so it is loud). Since I started recommending them so much I have a feeling that I've been bidding against many of you on eBay for these things - the prices have gone up a bit and they are a little harder to find but they can still be had for under $100. The switch is gigabit so that keeps your computer-to-computer or device-to-device traffic up to modern speeds and you are throttled by your internet provider anyway so as long as 100mb/sec is higher than what you are paying for the 10/100 router will not be a bottle neck.
With that setup above you have the same exact setup that is powering a few NYSE market making firms, a couple HFT shops and a few remote prop groups. For $200 you can have that at your house. If that becomes too little then I jump up to a PfSense box for them - which is similar to how you use the Mikrotick devices - there is no "setup wizard" you need to build every rule and start building your firewall from scratch.
Quote from tenthousandmen:If you are close to the exchange you could rent your own private cable straight to the exchange.
Most prop firms are already doing that and paying thousands of dollars a month (like $25k-$75k). Why not leverage someone else vs. pay to rent a wave of light on someone's fiber?
Quote from bawr:Cisco ASA 5515-X.
That's a $3000 used device and upwards of $5000 new. That's stupid money to be spending IMO. I can build you a firewall & router combo that will blow the doors off of that for much less money. Even still, that Cisco device is a decent appliance.
Mikrotick:
I've been looking at the documentation for the Mikrotick hardware and I see what they are like. It is essentially more robust hardware but much less restricting on the GUI/user interface - which is good, you can do anything you want (rules, VPN's allow/disallow, etc.) but it comes at a price - command line interface (or the GUI is not much better) and very logical/straight forward entry.
I think that this would be very impossible for most end users to handle. Saying that you need to know what you are doing to set this up is an understatement. It is essentially the same setup as PfSense except that the Mikrotick guys have a very basic web GUI.
I don't mean to knock readers or users but this is one of those things when they say "if you have to ask you probably can't afford it". If you have to ask what it means to build firewall rules from the ground up or what NAT means, etc. then you are probably better off buying something else.