1) You already have IP addresses for each connected device. DHCP does that for you. Nothing would come through if you did not have an IP address for a connected device.
OK, I didn't know each one had a different IP. Like I said, I'm not very knowledgeable about intranet and all the myriad terms. Yes, I know, a little knowledge is dangerous
2) Don't know about other Asus RTN56U setup options. Take a look at the user guide. Sign into it and look around, then look up via Google what you see that looks like it might be involved. Swap cables.
Have looked at the user guide, there is very little in it except for initial settings, which I checked. I've also waded through the many, many different sections of the Asus configuration setup screen and I have no idea what changes would be relevant, that's why I'm here.
I can't swap cables because the TV is 50' away, but it's a brand new CAT6 cable.. maybe I can get a cable checker some place, but that was one of the reasons I was asking if a good test would be to connect the TV directly to the computer to bypass the router, and no one answered me.
3) SD cards are not the same as DLNA. Different circuits. You're pushing 1080P into a 720P TV. Try downgrading the video and see if it works. Visually, you should notice little to no difference unless you're watching hi def animation. If so, the kids won't notice or care.
Yes I know the card isn't the same as the DLNA, but why would a 1080p HD mov file play smoothly while the same size mp4 doesn't? And why does the mov video play fine using the windows server, but hardly play at all using the Serviio server?
4) Try streaming something not 1080P into your 720P TV. Download something from YouTube (google for suitable software) and see if it streams via DLNA.
Yes, they steam fine, but again, mp4's are a bit jerky at 720p and the TV is a Plasma HD 720p If it were just a resolution problem, wouldn't the SD card test have failed too? Or is it just because it's the combination of being DLNA?
5) If you have a DVD player, does it have DLNA capabilities? If so, stream to it and use HDMI to pull from the DVD player.
No, it doesn't, but I am getting a new Samsung Blueray player soon with this feature and will try it out.
6) The Serviio forum has a lot of technical advice. Take a look.
I haven't started invading them yet as I was hoping to get some help here. If you are all still convinced it is a server problem I'll try them next.
Otherwise, out of ideas. My old RTN56U streamed media just fine. I didn't change much of anything. I used it plain vanilla except I also used it as a DLNA server with a USB drive attached. It's probably one of the finest routers ever made. Even though it's N600, it's still a great router many that meets most family's practical needs.
Last night I reconnected the Wifi receiver on the TV and reconfigured the TV for Wifi using the WPS pin code setup method. I connected using DLNA to the computer by Wifi and the mp4 1080p movies I had trouble with before were only slightly jerky. Something is really messed up, does this mean I have a bad cable? My whole reason to install the cable was to get around wifi lag problems I've had watching net movies and cable is supposed to be much faster then wifi.
Again, can I attach the cable directly to the PC, bypassing the router and would that be a good test to see if the cable is bad or if maybe I have a bad Asus unit?
Advhomeserver: I wasn't ignoring your advice, I should have remarked about your post before, so am doing it now. Certainly didn't mean to offend you.
Thanks,