Old_Man_Yells_At_iCloud
New Around Here
Wasn't sure whether to post here or to a more general subforum but, as one of the routers involved is ASUS, here seemed like the better bet.
I have an iPad (Air 2 as it goes) and my parents have a late-2012 MacBook Pro running Mountain Lion (10.8.5).
Currently, we're using the WNR2200 supplied by our ISP (Eclipse Internet here in the UK) but, as you know, the WNR2200 is only an N300 rated device, and I have an Internet radio app that streams at 320k, and I also watch HD videos via YouTube and, as my room is at the opposite end of the house to the router (and the router can't be relocated), coupled with the single 2.4GHz band, means I'm becoming more and more frustrated with the continual buffering and dropped connections.
I have never had much love for Netgear, and I vowed never to use Linksys again after a Linksys router I had years ago died WITHIN warranty (3 months left) but Linksys refused to replace it because I couldn't run their diagnostics as I was using OS X, and they only offered support for Windows!
So, that left ASUS. After one faulty 3200 (it wouldn't even boot), I received a replacement from Amazon. Cabled it up, and entered our login, only to discover it was glacially slow- far slower than the Netgear it was bought to replace.
The Netgear, incidentally, currently plays host to 6 wireless devices (soon to be seven as Dad has just bought an iPad mini) and, as I'm sure you'll agree, a single 2.4GHz band is far too puny for so many.
I tried to troubleshoot the 3200 myself, but I'm not all that network-savvy, so Father dearest called our ISP, who tested the line, and said it tested out fine (I don't really see why that was necessary as its wifi I'm having problems with, but still).
Dad said he explained about there being too many devices - and thus too much traffic - for a single band router to handle which was why I'd bought the 3200. I'd also explained to him that the reason I have problems, but they don't when watching TV on catch-up, is that the stream to the set-top box will be cached. Dad told me that ISP support guy told him that switching from a single to a tri-band router would NOT make a single iota of difference to my streaming issues. I told my father that ISPTSG was talking out his arse, at which point Dad yelled "I doubt that VERY much!" and slammed my bedroom door.
Y'see in my parents' eyes, I know feck all; some moron in an ISP tech support dept who's been trained to read answers from a flowchart knows more than I do. Dad is now refusing to speak to me; I'm stuck in bed chronically ill and, on top of that, I've my autism to contend with (something they've never accepted I actually have), so I'm not really coping with anything right now (and I'm not able to use the phone myself. I asked Dad to get ISPTSG to email me, something he refuses to do because "You're as capable of speaking to them as I am!").
So, I'm left to deal with this on my own; the 3200 returns an average speed of 25Mbps when tested with speedtest.com from the MBP (the MBP isn't wired), whereas the Netgear gets an average of 35. Can anyone shed any light on why the vastly superior 3200 is getting such poor speeds…?
ASUS support has been, predictably, useless.
Finally. I can't get access to the laptop until after they've gone to bed (more than my life's worth to go downstairs during the day).
Oh, if it matters/helps, here's a list of the devices:
2 iPads
2 STBs,
1 printer (a Brother of some description)
1 WD MyBook
The MBP
Can anyone help before I commit patricide…? He's exactly like his father - multiplied by a factor of at least 1,000.
So what's my next move…? ASUS's 'Smart' Connect software is Windows-only, of course.
My next laptop will be running some species of Penguin, I can't decide between Mint, Plasma or Ubuntu (I'm leaning towards the latter, seems to be a good bet for a Linux noob), I'm just slightly scared of the learning curve - I don't want something so steep I need crampons and oxygen! This experience with the 3200 is making me even more wary.
Cheers, folks!
SJ
I have an iPad (Air 2 as it goes) and my parents have a late-2012 MacBook Pro running Mountain Lion (10.8.5).
Currently, we're using the WNR2200 supplied by our ISP (Eclipse Internet here in the UK) but, as you know, the WNR2200 is only an N300 rated device, and I have an Internet radio app that streams at 320k, and I also watch HD videos via YouTube and, as my room is at the opposite end of the house to the router (and the router can't be relocated), coupled with the single 2.4GHz band, means I'm becoming more and more frustrated with the continual buffering and dropped connections.
I have never had much love for Netgear, and I vowed never to use Linksys again after a Linksys router I had years ago died WITHIN warranty (3 months left) but Linksys refused to replace it because I couldn't run their diagnostics as I was using OS X, and they only offered support for Windows!
So, that left ASUS. After one faulty 3200 (it wouldn't even boot), I received a replacement from Amazon. Cabled it up, and entered our login, only to discover it was glacially slow- far slower than the Netgear it was bought to replace.
The Netgear, incidentally, currently plays host to 6 wireless devices (soon to be seven as Dad has just bought an iPad mini) and, as I'm sure you'll agree, a single 2.4GHz band is far too puny for so many.
I tried to troubleshoot the 3200 myself, but I'm not all that network-savvy, so Father dearest called our ISP, who tested the line, and said it tested out fine (I don't really see why that was necessary as its wifi I'm having problems with, but still).
Dad said he explained about there being too many devices - and thus too much traffic - for a single band router to handle which was why I'd bought the 3200. I'd also explained to him that the reason I have problems, but they don't when watching TV on catch-up, is that the stream to the set-top box will be cached. Dad told me that ISP support guy told him that switching from a single to a tri-band router would NOT make a single iota of difference to my streaming issues. I told my father that ISPTSG was talking out his arse, at which point Dad yelled "I doubt that VERY much!" and slammed my bedroom door.
Y'see in my parents' eyes, I know feck all; some moron in an ISP tech support dept who's been trained to read answers from a flowchart knows more than I do. Dad is now refusing to speak to me; I'm stuck in bed chronically ill and, on top of that, I've my autism to contend with (something they've never accepted I actually have), so I'm not really coping with anything right now (and I'm not able to use the phone myself. I asked Dad to get ISPTSG to email me, something he refuses to do because "You're as capable of speaking to them as I am!").
So, I'm left to deal with this on my own; the 3200 returns an average speed of 25Mbps when tested with speedtest.com from the MBP (the MBP isn't wired), whereas the Netgear gets an average of 35. Can anyone shed any light on why the vastly superior 3200 is getting such poor speeds…?
ASUS support has been, predictably, useless.
Finally. I can't get access to the laptop until after they've gone to bed (more than my life's worth to go downstairs during the day).
Oh, if it matters/helps, here's a list of the devices:
2 iPads
2 STBs,
1 printer (a Brother of some description)
1 WD MyBook
The MBP
Can anyone help before I commit patricide…? He's exactly like his father - multiplied by a factor of at least 1,000.
So what's my next move…? ASUS's 'Smart' Connect software is Windows-only, of course.
My next laptop will be running some species of Penguin, I can't decide between Mint, Plasma or Ubuntu (I'm leaning towards the latter, seems to be a good bet for a Linux noob), I'm just slightly scared of the learning curve - I don't want something so steep I need crampons and oxygen! This experience with the 3200 is making me even more wary.
Cheers, folks!
SJ