I'll only buy routers if they (can) run Free Software!

Being in the fortunate situation that I can finally spend some time in Zürich to catch up on issues that were left unattended, like finishing the network infrastructure.

For this, I discovered OpenWRT, a GNU/Linux based firmware for routers that can be used like any other GNU/Linux operating system, including running sophisticated firewalls, Samba or Asterisk servers, Wikis, or whatever else you wanted to put on an embedded box. I also discovered another project called FreeWRT, which seems to be a spin-off of OpenWRT, aiming to support more hardware platforms, but they currently have no release out, so I could not try them.

The existance of these projects has changed my life to the better in a very fundamental way. Finally I can make my routers do what I actually want them to do, and not what some marketing person in some company thought you should want it to do according to their market segment and pricing calculations.

While all of that may be generally acceptable, I'd much rather get hardware with a good and sane default operating system and function set, but with the freedom to modify it to what I actually want, if I so choose.

And after I now found that freedom, I certainly won't go below it in the future, which translates into a very clear and simple message:

    From now on, I will only buy routers that are supported by OpenWRT and/or FreeWRT -- or a similar Free Software project!

In fact I hope that other people will pick make this pledge their own and also put it up on the web, making sure that routers that do NOT offer you this freedom simply won't be selling very well.

Comments

ACK

First of all, I agree.
I bought my last router for the reason that I could run it with a GNU/Linux system. I'm not a hacker at all and I didn't change anything in the open source operating system I use on it (DD-WRT for those who want to know), but I thought it better to have the freedom of choice.
And besides, this router has the best hardware I've ever seen in such a device.

I can nothing but agree on that...

I'm a Linksys WRT54GS user for quite some time now. I also came to the conclusion that exactly such a router with a Free Software enviroment is the right thing for me after reading an article about it. Until now I haven't had a single problem with it.
However, one has to note that their have been problems with Linksys/Cisco related to exactly that router model in the past. They had to be forced to give us our(!) modified code back, read http://lwn.net/Articles/51570/ for details.

The WRT54 is some sort of end-user solution, nothing really powerfull.
One problem I see is that there are no Free Software alternatives for mid- to big-range routers such as the ones of Cisco. If you have to use a router with the performance of those you eventually have to use their proprietary software. If I'm wrong here please tell me, I'd love to hear about Free Software enviroments for Cisco routers.

There is are a lot of places where the Free Software community could actually help hardware vendors boosting their sales. But for some odd reason they don't do what initially sounds so logical. May that be due to fear of competitors? Probably yes.

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