What I'm most concerned about, as somebody switching back to a Windows Phone soon, is the apparent lack of a web interface for the OnHub. According to this page [1] the OnHub requires an Android or iOS device, with the app installed, to setup and configure the router. I don't blame Google for not supporting Windows Phone, the market share is still very low, but I'm not convinced that requiring an app instead of using a web interface like every other router is what I want from this.
Apple Airports all require apps. There's no web interface. They have Windows, OSX, and Linux apps.
I agree with you I prefer a web interface. Just pointing out that there is a pair of very popular routers that don't have one.
Fortunately they also don't need internet which it sounds like the OnHub currently does? In other words if I'm doing some kind of installation that users a router without internet I can still configure an Airport but if understand correctly I could not configure an OnHub ... yet?
That's sort of a crucial distinction. You have to run the application, but pretty much everybody has something that can run it. That's very different than requiring an application that only runs on mobile devices, and even then only some mobile devices.
I'm actually not seeing a Linux version of the Airport utility anywhere, although apparently the Windows version pretty well with WINE.
I spent an hour fighting with the Airport utility in WINE a couple months ago. It launched, but I had issues discoving the Airport. Eventually I caved and had a non-technical friend with a Macbook configure my router for me. </shame>
But even fans of them have to admit that they do attract a certain demographic. Namely people who want Apple-only products throughout their home, Macs, iPads, iPhones, Airports, Time Capsule, Apple TV, etc. I can count on my hands how many people I know who have an Airport, and they're all Apple fanatics.
Most people either seem to utilise whatever their ISP gives them (the vast majority), or buy whatever is popular on Amazon and has the features they want. Even then power users are a small subset of consumers.
Airports requiring an app isn't a good justification for why Google can do the same. I'd argue that Airports are in the wrong here, and that the market has shown that routers which provide a web interface do better.
I don't think people don't buy Airport because it doesn't have web interface. I guess the real reason is the price. If you looks at all routers at $200 price range, Airport probably has the worst looking spec.
I do agree that the specs do not look enticing on paper, compared to say the Asus ones, but in my experience they last longer.
Whenever I visit my parents I usually bring replacement hardware for whatever is broken. When I first got them their Airport Extreme, I replaced it after 5 years. I got them an Asus router with a really impressive wifi range, but it broke after just 1 year. Now they're back with the latest Airport Extreme.
It's a bit pricey for the specs but it's very reliable. I use 2 at home, that are bridged via gigabit ethernet, and they're pretty good. My only complain is that they don't have VLAN support (IPTV) and their wifi range is really bad.
But have you used one? Spec and usability are not the same thing. I have one of the high end Asus routers and several Airport Extremes. I think you know where this is going.. I'm using the AirPort Extreme right now. Dead simple to set up bridges, everything works, no need to do any overclocking to get enough power to penetrate my 17th century stone walls. If the iPhone taught us anything it's that specs matter far less than user experience. Of course there are probably still guys hacking away on Windows XP that would disagree of course.
I don't have one. But I never said Airport is bad. The point I'm trying to make here is that the "profile" of Airport is not very attractive to non apple fans and experienced user. iphone can draw attention by user experience rather than cpu numbers because people care about their phone. But the importance of router is at a position that usually ignored by average user. Take a car as example, cellphone and laptop are like engines and suspensions which draw every car buyers attention. While router is like tire, and non car guys pursuit 4WD instead of good tire when they need traction.
I've been having a similar experience. I wrote some software (http://docs.happyfuntimes.com) that connects lots of users to a local web server. I've personally used 5 different routers with it and others have used more. The AirPort Extreme is the only one that hasn't had any issues so far.
I'm hoping the OnHub will be good but I need a way to configure it without Internet
My opinion probably won’t be popular, but for me the Airport configuration app is a selling point. It’s a simple, sane, nicely designed native app that works wonderfully for configuring either a single router or whole network of routers from a central point, as opposed to having to hop around between each router’s config page. I find it much nicer than most router web interfaces, which are often badly designed and look like they’re stuck in 2005.
What’s more is that the same app works for both my Airport Extreme from 2004 as well as the one I bought two months ago. The consistency is awesome.
I agree. I have two Airports - one in my house, and one in my detached garage/office. Being able to bridge the two together into a single seamless network was easy and reliable. Doing it with my previous wireless routers was a total pain.
I don't think the lack of a web interface has anything to do with Apple's option selling less, most people buying these simply will not know the difference.
Also Apple's Market is not really anyone that would need a web interface as it would generally be marketed to existing Apple customers.
I am surprised Google don't have a web interface, If they are able to make all those other fancy features but no web interface, what other corners did they cut? To say that it is coming soon just seems to me they released this product before it was quite ready, like why is the usb port not active yet?
That's sort of a crucial distinction. You have to run the application, but pretty much everybody has something that can run it. That's very different than requiring an application that only runs on mobile devices, and even then only some mobile devices.
I'm actually not seeing a Linux version of the Airport utility anywhere, although apparently it works pretty well with WINE.
Off topic but I am quite tired of "apps" replacing websites. I have 2 friends that used wedding apps as opposed to websites and it really made it difficult for many to know what was going on.
This would also be an easy win for a company such as Google that is finally 'getting' design since every router web interface I have ever seen has been beyond appalling. It wouldn't take much to be the industry leader in this regard by a country mile.
They're functional and usually better looking than the default interface, but that's a pretty low bar. I still wouldn't classify them as looking "good".
Ugly. Not intuitive unless you are an expert. I wouldn't expect someone's grandmother to be success using it; constraining that with the airport setup that is super simple.
I forget which one, but a review I've read in the past 24 hours said that they plan to eventually have a web equivalent to the phone app for basic setup.
They also emit a constant, loud fan whine because they're meant to live in a rack. They also take multiple minutes to reboot. Automatic updates are delivered by trained humans via archaic incantations of "tftp get".
[1]: https://on.google.com/hub/support/#get-started