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How is the Smart Hub 3 these days?

Fibrejay
Member

Hi,

As per the above title, just curious to know how the Smart Hub 3 is performing. Is the firmware still very buggy or have recent firmware updates sorted things out?

2 REPLIES 2

orion_pilot
Member

Hi Fibrejay, my opinion on the matter is split by two factors.
1 - BT has to support a massed marketplace, residential and business.  To that end, they make the devices as plug and play as possible, and as remotely supportable as possible.  They therefore specifically limit the complexity of the installation and the options available to the user to prevent BT from getting blamed for 'sunburns' and 'misconfigurations'.  The net end result is the user interface on all the Hubs is severly limited in its functionality and is effectively designed to be a zero configuration setup.  BT have my complete understanding on this as it is impossible to be the IT support helpdesk to millions of end users, of which most lack the skills or knowledge required to triage or remedy their own problems.  So, we should always reasonably expect the consumer user interface to be very limited and to be fit for purpose 99% of the time.

 

2 - If you need deep configuration capabilities over your WAN and LAN then you are free to supply your own Router and BT do not restrict this, nor do they map the user credentials to the MAC address of a specific device.  If your business requires deep config of the LAN, VPN, DHCP, DHCPv6, VPN, NTP, DNS, Firewall rules, enhanced logging, intrusion detection, SNMP, IGMP, or even to act as your own PPPoE Service, make a captive portal for guests, rate limiting, traffic shaping, VLANs and much more then you'll need to provide your own kit that surfaces all of these items so you can configure your WAN and LAN to taste.

It is my less than humble opinion that if you need anything that cannot be satisfied by the base user interface on any BT supplied HUB router then you will be rolling your own.  But, I absolutely understand why BT ships dumbed down devices.  Simply put, if they didn't they have a massive IT helpdesk problem and have to charge consumers way more for the monthly subscription to cover the costs of repairing and fixing user created issues.

So, this isn't really a question of Smart Hub 1, or Smart Hub 3; they are all extremely limited in functionality, but it is by design.

Hi orion_pilot,

 

Thanks for your reply. I think I'll pass on using the hub as I need some more advanced features for my network. I did briefly plug-in the Smart Hub 3 and the functionality is very locked down like you say. I agree with your comments about simplicity for support and many users out there that just need plug and play.