I see the following in a short time:
IPV6 6 to 4 tunnel WORKS
My wireless transfer speeds from my 2 TB hd has dropped from 9.5 mps to 1.9 mps! This is a deal breaker for me. Its terrible. Anyone else see this?
CC
been up 6 hours and no problems so far. Looking at the release notes looks like not much different from .102I've read somewhere that the unit will stop broadcasting the SSID after the update...can someone verify this issue for us?
Yep, good idea to factory reset and power cycle after a firmware upgrade.
what format do you have your drive in?ALL,
Update: I reflashed the firmware. Restored to default and manually put in my settings. I can now report:
1 - Download speed from USB connected 2 TB HD is fastest its ever been 82 mbps (9.8 mbs) dling a 1 mb file to laptop.
2 - Just streamed a ripped Blue Ray move from HD on USB to my laptop 1 floor down, flawless!
3 - IPV6 as before verified working perfectly
4 - DHCP reservation working perfectly
5 - No sign of lost SSID bug so far, will keep an eye on it
I am very please now! WHEW........
CC
getting great transfer rates on 5ghz band 9.9MB/sec-10.7MB/sec 102 was getting a best about 8.6-9.3 MB/ sec , crazy transfer rates , bet my 3700 v.1 could get was 7.6 MB/sec . So far no troubles with 108 . Above with 3 GB file .
Yes, manually re-entering your configuration after a firmware upgrade and factory reset is a good idea. You never know what's been changed when firmware is revised, so you don't know if your old configuration will work or not. Best to just re-enter your configuration and have a clean start with new firmware. You can save your current settings again after everything's working in case you make a mistake and screw things up subsequently *smile*.
Hi,
I have a habit of erasing NVRAM whenever I play with F/W.
For most settings I wouldn't mind doing this, but unfortunately the one setting I tend to make is to reserve specific IP addresses for all of my devices (not all of them need it, but a surprising number of them have built-in web services that I like to access for various reasons, so I simply reserve them all). Presently that is about 20 devices in my home. Unfortunately, I don't see any easy way to reserve a bunch of assignments. If there was an easy way to make those reservations after resetting, I'd love to always do a reset - any thoughts?Yes, manually re-entering your configuration after a firmware upgrade and factory reset is a good idea. You never know what's been changed when firmware is revised, so you don't know if your old configuration will work or not. Best to just re-enter your configuration and have a clean start with new firmware. You can save your current settings again after everything's working in case you make a mistake and screw things up subsequently *smile*.
For most settings I wouldn't mind doing this, but unfortunately the one setting I tend to make is to reserve specific IP addresses for all of my devices (not all of them need it, but a surprising number of them have built-in web services that I like to access for various reasons, so I simply reserve them all). Presently that is about 20 devices in my home. Unfortunately, I don't see any easy way to reserve a bunch of assignments. If there was an easy way to make those reservations after resetting, I'd love to always do a reset - any thoughts?
Hi Roger,Just one thing, I've noticed that my bridge IP address is converted to a hotlink in the client list. I can click the IP address hotlink and it brings up the web configuration interface. If this were the case for the devices that you have that have web interfaces that you want to access, and the names of the devices in the client list were enough to identify the devices, then you wouldn't need to have static IP's for them at all for that reason.
Just wondering if that might work for you?
Hi Roger,
I'm not sure where you are seeing this bridge IP address hot link, but in my case I simply type the known IP address in my browser window and I'm there - I don't have to go finding where its hotlink might live.
Also, web services is one reason to need their IP addresses, but there are other reasons. File services and printing often use hard coded IP addresses. Even my A/V receiver provides network services, but the apps that control it are flakey if they have to find it via network scanning so it works much better if I can simply give them the right IP to begin with and if it would reliably stay at that IP.
I ran some iperf iterations and was getting around 17 MBps, a good 1/3 over what I was getting before too. Yee haw!
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