I haven't used one of those in a decade but I really liked the minis I had back then. Glad to see they're still around. How is the software these days? On Wed, Dec 17, 2025, 8:01 PM Mel Beckman via NANOG <nanog@lists.nanog.org> wrote:
We use the AirConsole line extensively:
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Tiny little brickey things that you can link together using daisychain cables and physical sliding interlocks. All the connections are RS45, so you do need various kinds of adapters, but those are available. Natively it speaks Cisco, but we have cables for HP and Juniper that interoperate as well.
Internally, it’s basically a linux box. You get SSH pass-through to virtual serial ports with, so just SSH to a pre-configured TCP port number to connect to a given serial port in an AirCosole stack. A web GUI is nice for configuration. Plus it supports Wi-Fi connectivity, so they are super handy for portable use with tablets and smart phones too. Very well thought-out features such as unattended buffering, and dozens of knobs and dials.
Airconsole Enterprise Server (previously "Private Server") is a VM appliance designed to provide NOC operators with remote “NASA Screen” infrastructure, creating a simple aggregation point for remote serial console access. I’ve used that in SCADA deployments for direct control outside of WonderWare. 
We are constantly finding new tricks these things can do.
-mel beckman
On Dec 17, 2025, at 4:52 PM, Dan Mahoney via NANOG <nanog@lists.nanog.org> wrote:
Hey there folks.
Dayjob has historically used USB TTY pods attached to real BSD machines to talk to our cisco consoles, with the amazing benefit that with a program like Vixie's rtty (or conserver) you can also capture the output of those consoles in real-time, and perhaps use that data to identify a connected device.
As a bonus, because the rackmount devices have real DE-9's on them, it means they work with any kind of cable you get (not just your standard rj45 cisco rollover like you might get with a Cyclades thing -- and you don't have to come up with the weird-ass mappings for rj45-serial like you might need like our ME4012 NAS (the serial cable is a stereo plug), our smart power strips (it's either a stereo plug, or an rj12), or something like an older brocade switch (it's a DE9, but it's friggin ODD, and I think it may also be the wrong gender).
It also means, since you're running a real OS, you have patches as long as the OS is supported (so you're not stuck with "gee it only speaks rsa1024"), versus some EOL appliance. But it's also 2u, and since we're recently buying a lot of Dell hardware, that's Super Overkill for a dell, so I'm evaluating maybe just going "Appliance".
If we stick with an existing unix box for this, I'd want something with proper IPMI/OOB (so Rpi is out) but maybe the dumbest, shallowest-depth atom64 supermicro you can find, in the event you need to do a reinstall or catch a hung system.
Are there things that other folks are using that are "easy" to work with that you've found to have Long firmware lives, decent warranties and low hassle? Does anything these days actually have DE9s on it?
-Dan
(You may have also seen my note earlier about the Cisco ASR920, which has RS232 pins in a USB-A header. No, not via a PL2032 chip inside the host that provides a virtual serial...direct txd/rxd/gnd/cts etc, on the USB pins. I've seen things you people would't believe) _______________________________________________ NANOG mailing list
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