srnoth's Profile
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- Group:
- Moderators
- Active Posts:
- 584 (0.08 per day)
- Most Active In:
- High Speed ADSL (134 posts)
- Joined:
- 19-March 05
- Profile Views:
- 8,491
- Last Active:
- Aug 16 2009 08:11 PM
- Currently:
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Posts I've Made
-
In Topic: Problems with Buffalo wireless router on Flow
Posted 10 May 2008
What kind of buffalo router is it? Depending on which model it is it may support upgrading the firmware to some thing like DD-WRT (http://www.dd-wrt.com), which would make it considerably more reliable, and also gives you some pretty advanced features. -
In Topic: Improvement in Service
Posted 10 May 2008
Now this is progress! -
In Topic: HELP my BLINK speeds has Decreased
Posted 10 May 2008
One thing you can try if you're good with electronics is to connect the modem directly to the cable coming from the pole (ie at the telephone box outside), and disconnect the wiring in your house, so that you bypass any old/faulty wiring, and see what kinds of speeds you get. That way you would know whether it is the wiring in your house or the TSTT lines on the poles that are causing the low speeds. -
In Topic: 6th LED - Telephone 1
Posted 1 May 2008
Call worked from a digicel phone yesterday. Seems they have some sort of interconnection worked out. -
In Topic: I have a dream (and a network) ;)
Posted 31 Mar 2008
Lich King, on Mar 29 2008, 06:28 PM, said:
XP machine not bad but you would be wasting like 300W of power to leave that pc powered all the time just to get internet shared. It will bottleneck too so best you invest in a decent router. You probably don't need a WRT54GL, any regular router would work especially since you probably won't be messing around with the router by installing linux firmware on it. You better off with a regular WRT54G because linksys got back smart and started using the latest Broadcom BCM5354 chipset in it instead of that Atheros crap.
Actually I've been looking at the newer Linksys routers and the WRT-150N seems like the better option now. It is US$90 instead of US$50-60 for the regular WRT54g, but it is supported fully by the linux firmwares (like dd-wrt), and will support the 802.11N protocol when it is fully ratified.
I agree with you though that if a person has no plans to install custom firmware like that, then the regular WRT-54G is the best option available.
My Information
- Member Title:
- Forum Moderator
- Age:
- 34 years old
- Birthday:
- June 23, 1989
- Location:
- Noel Trace, St. Augustine
- Interests:
- Computers, music, electronics...
Contact Information
- E-mail:
- Click here to e-mail me
- Website URL:
- http://www.srnoth.com
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