I need to put a few WIFI access points in a few rooms. One wifi router won’t do the trick - foil-backed insulation in the walls stops signals. If I built a network around EOMA68, is this a reasonable approach?
I imagine the simplest way to make one WIFI access point using an EOMA68-A20 card is to hook up a USB wifi adapter using a USB OTG cable.
To make a network of these APs with a central management console means plugging in hardware like this.
unmanaged switch | +— Internet | +— headless EOMA68 | +— WIFI AP (EOMA68 and wifi adapter) | +— WIFI AP | +— WIFI AP
Then it’s all about mixing and matching software for the central console, access control, package updates and so on.
Presumably the 'sellable product' approach is to build a housing that adds POE, MIMO antennas, and IEEE 802.11ac.
USB wifi adapter https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/penguin-wireless-n-usb-adapter-w-exte...
--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Fri, Sep 16, 2016 at 10:31 PM, Nick Hardiman nick@internetmachines.co.uk wrote:
I need to put a few WIFI access points in a few rooms. One wifi router won’t do the trick - foil-backed insulation in the walls stops signals. If I built a network around EOMA68, is this a reasonable approach?
yeah i don't see why not. if using the OTG port (instead of a microdesktop housing where you have access to the 2 USB Host ports) bear in mind it's part software-defined (musb from Mentor Graphics).
l.
arm-netbook@lists.phcomp.co.uk