My Bad: EnGenius EOC-2610 vs Wave WiFi Comet
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March 15, 2010
"It's the firmware (and customer support), stupid!" That's the lesson I learned when I bought an $75 EnGenius EOC-2610
high-power WiFi system in December, 2008 (when I was staying in NYC, cadging Internet from neighbors). I got far enough into its dense menu systems to see some good hot spots, but I never got the damn thing to actually connect. And at first my hubris was such that I simultaneously took to task a small company called Great Boat Gear for selling a "marine" version of the same hardware at more than double the cost. Well, my bad...
I used the Comet a fair bit on Gizmo last Fall and was quite pleased with performance as well as ease. I also checked out Wave WiFi's customer support line and was tickled to get a smart human who even knew something about a local WiFi weirdness I've run into from time to time, like when testing the 5MileWiFi USB device. Wave -- which is a division of GeoSat Solutions, a partner in the Argus depth data project, and a former partner of Syrens Onboard (I tried to explain here) -- has a lot of experience dealing with boaters frustrated with WiFi!
Ubiquiti's native firmware AirOS may be easier to use than EnGenius's, but it looks like Wave is again using its own super easy stuff, and I don't know about the others. If I was shopping Bullets I'd look deeper into this subject, and customer support. Lesson learned! Incidentally, while I still favor power-over-Ethernet over the USB-powered WiFi amps, I was a little surprised to realize that the ones I've been discussing here use 12 or 24 volts and not the 48v standard used by many commercial bridges, VOIP phones, IP cameras, and gear like the FLIR M-Series thermal camera controller. So while Ethernet switches with POE built in sound slick for big boat systems, be careful! All the vendors mentioned here make good cases for POE WiFi bridges, but check out The Wirie for a counter argument, even a comparison chart. And those of you looking for a really inexpensive but easy-to-use WiFi router might like the Blue Box, though the set-up sounds non trivial.