We host our internal application and require stable connections to our branch offices, each equipped with a minimum of two ISPs. In our headquarters, we have three. A notable feature of the solution is its link-banding. Unlike other VPNs, it ensures uninterrupted file transfers even if the primary connection or tunneling is disrupted, eliminating downtime in downloading or uploading files.
Field data engineer at a energy/utilities company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
Top 5
2023-02-17T16:45:02Z
Feb 17, 2023
The primary use case for Peplink SpeedFusion is to manage sites. For example, Where I may have a cellular satellite or a do-away solution, and I'm gonna switch over for redundancy.
Product Development Manager at a comms service provider with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2021-12-07T14:51:00Z
Dec 7, 2021
Our primary use case is for connecting the other SD-WAN. It's used for connecting from branches to headquarters. Peplink is very strong in the device for connecting within the LTE, within the SIM console. Peplink can deploy on everything, on the building, the vehicle, mobile transportation; it's very flexible.
Network & Security Engineer, Team Lead at Crescendo Technology Ltd.
Real User
2020-12-03T16:24:10Z
Dec 3, 2020
We're implementing this solution on all our sites. Basically, we want to utilize both ISPs that we have. In the past, we've only used active standby. Whenever we have outages, we want it to be seamless to be able to use the other connection with the other one being down. We have two different models that we use. For the offices, we use Balance 380, and for our data center, we use Balance 710. We also have a fusion hub installed in the cloud for Azure and AWS. Right now, it is sitting in front of our firewalls. All of our sites have dual ISPs. So, we are load balancing the internet traffic, and we are using SpeedFusion between the sites.
Peplink’s patent-pending SpeedFusion technology powers enterprise VPNs that tap into the bandwidth of up to 13 low-cost cable, DSL, 3G/4G/LTE, and other links connected anywhere on your corporate or institutional WAN. Whether you’re transferring a few documents or driving realtime POS data, video feeds, and VoIP conversations, SpeedFusion pumps all your data down a single fat datapipe that’s budget-friendly, ultra-fast, and easily configurable to suit any networking environment.
I use Peplink SpeedFusion for VPN purposes.
We host our internal application and require stable connections to our branch offices, each equipped with a minimum of two ISPs. In our headquarters, we have three. A notable feature of the solution is its link-banding. Unlike other VPNs, it ensures uninterrupted file transfers even if the primary connection or tunneling is disrupted, eliminating downtime in downloading or uploading files.
The primary use case for Peplink SpeedFusion is to manage sites. For example, Where I may have a cellular satellite or a do-away solution, and I'm gonna switch over for redundancy.
Our primary use case is for connecting the other SD-WAN. It's used for connecting from branches to headquarters. Peplink is very strong in the device for connecting within the LTE, within the SIM console. Peplink can deploy on everything, on the building, the vehicle, mobile transportation; it's very flexible.
We're implementing this solution on all our sites. Basically, we want to utilize both ISPs that we have. In the past, we've only used active standby. Whenever we have outages, we want it to be seamless to be able to use the other connection with the other one being down. We have two different models that we use. For the offices, we use Balance 380, and for our data center, we use Balance 710. We also have a fusion hub installed in the cloud for Azure and AWS. Right now, it is sitting in front of our firewalls. All of our sites have dual ISPs. So, we are load balancing the internet traffic, and we are using SpeedFusion between the sites.
We use it for site-to-site connectivity and for video and audio broadcasting.