My biggest issue with Meraki is that their tech staff can run tcpdump on the wired or wireless interface of your Meraki box without having to leave their desk. I have no reason to believe that they are malicious, or in the pay of the NSA, but I am too paranoid to allow their equipment anywhere near me.
Yes, they work well and the cloud control panel makes remote support a breeze; you have to decide how you feel about the insecurity. paul > On Jun 27, 2016, at 6:28 PM, Dan Stralka <mrsyelt...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I would second Meraki for the situation you describe. I don't feel that > they are the most capable platform, they're expensive, and don't always > present you with all the information you'd need for troubleshooting. > However, the VPN offers great dynamic tunneling, instant-on performance, > and are by far the simplest platform to offer a field person. They're also > tenacious - I've had them connect to the cloud management platform and > build a VPN under some trying circumstances. > > From a security standpoint, they will offer features that will impress for > the price (Sourcefire, inability to use if stolen, 802.1x, and remote VPN > tunnel control), and we've found they punch above their weight and their > APs perform fantastically. > > We deploy them worldwide many times per year in similar use cases, > sometimes with 150 users on the LAN. If your routing is simple, you can > define your security policies, and don't need crazy throughput on your VPN, > Meraki is the way to go. Be careful though: they have to be continually > licensed to work and can get pretty expensive if you go for the higher end > gear. Thus far, we've been able to stick to the cheaper stuff and > accomplish our goals. > > Dan > > (end) > On Jun 27, 2016 6:01 PM, "Karl Auer" <ka...@biplane.com.au> wrote: > >> On Mon, 2016-06-27 at 13:08 -0700, c b wrote: >>> In some cases... >> >> The words "in some cases" are a problem with any supposedly plug and >> play solution. >> >>> We really could use a simple solution that you >>> just flip on, it calls home, and works... >> >> ...but still requiring someone to enter credentials of some sort, >> right? Otherwise you have a device wandering about that provides look >> -mum-no-hands access to your corporate network. >> >> MikroTik stuff is cheap as chips, small, comes with wifi, ethernet, USB >> for a wireless dongle or storage, and has a highly-scriptable operating >> system. Not a bad platform. >> >> Regards, K. >> >> -- >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> Karl Auer (ka...@biplane.com.au) >> http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer >> http://twitter.com/kauer389 >> >> GPG fingerprint: E00D 64ED 9C6A 8605 21E0 0ED0 EE64 2BEE CBCB C38B >> Old fingerprint: 3C41 82BE A9E7 99A1 B931 5AE7 7638 0147 2C3C 2AC4 >> >> >> >>
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