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Nexalta Guardian: actually secure?


I have been looking into setting up a secure home server and hardening my local network and I came across this kickstarter which is currently floundering, likely because it's campaign page is way too technical without enough fluff for the uninformed out there (like myself to some extent).

That said, from what I can tell it seems like a really great device for my use case actually, combining a multiband WiFi 7 gateway with a built in NAS and upgradeable compute modules. As a binus it is a German company so I'm a bit less worried about back doors that with some of the Chinese generic manufacturers out there.

What I can't sus out is how secure this actually is, how technical my background needs to be to get it set up effectively, and whether the price is good for the hardware. Any help?

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)
in reply to Cooper8

Do you want to double check that url it gets a 404 error in Europe.
This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)
in reply to slazer2au

What do you think? It isn't cheap but seems like great hardware to a n00b like myself, I like the future-proofness and repairability of the slots it has. Possibly worth it?
in reply to Cooper8

For a turnkey device there is far too many options for a non technical person to successfully get what they want. It seems like it is aimed at the technical person to run for the non technical person.
in reply to Cooper8

Pretty loaded package. Love how expandable it is.

In its current configuration, it looks a bit underpowered for local AI (16GB), but there are a lot of slots to add your own M.2 board.

I'd be concerned about driver support. Given all the hardware, the burden is on the admin software to help with configuring all the knobs and buttons. Didn't see any mention of that on the KS page. Mostly hardware specs (which again, are pretty good).

I'd want to know more about the software. If it requires downloading tar archives and manually configuring things, it's not meant to be used by non-devs. They claim it was designed for medical office use, but for that they would definitely need an end-user friendly interface with a LOT of sane defaults.

Also, allowing only 15 days for a hardware KS is a bit strange. It takes a while to spread the word in the device community and get backers. Not much time to make a decision or get budget approved for a $2K+ device.

in reply to fubarx

in reply to Cooper8