General discussion related to Cable Modems, DSL, Wireless, Fiber, Mobile Networks, Wireless ISPs, Satellite, or any other type of high-speed Internet connection, general issues and questions here. Review and discuss ISPs as well (AT&T / SBC, BellSouth, Bright House, CableOne, Charter, Comcast, Covad, Cox, Cablevision / Optimum Online, TMobile, Verizon FIOS, Shaw, Telus, Starlink, etc.)
I bought one about 2 weeks ago and it went south on me. I went and bought another one and it too just took a dirt nap.
The reset won't work and I can't access the net to save my own life with it. Any advice? It turns on, I've tried resetting it using a pen but it still doesn't work. Actually I can't access the web based profil eeither. I tried installing it with the CD and still no luck
I have a Linksys and have never had one problem with it. As far as buying one for security, yes it is more secure than just a software firewall but it really isn't needed, I share my connection so I do need it.
ran a BEFSR41 V.2 24/7 since 6/30/01 without a single problem. Moved up to the BEFSX41 Firewall cable dsl 4port router last weekend. SPI firewall, 10/100 modem port, VPN support, UPnP, and etc.
MSI 990FXA-GD80v2
AMD FX-8350 @ 4.62ghz
16GB DDR3 @ 1866 8-9-9-24 1.5v
2 x 150gb WD Raptors in Raid 0
750GB WD Black
500GB WD Black
1TB WD Ultra USB3 ext
Sapphire 7970
Windows 8.1 Pro x64
I'm running a BEFSR41 4 port. I have not had a problem in 6 months. Nor any problem with my previous Linksys router. From my experience I would say that they are ok.
I've probably got over 200 Linksys router installs under my belt. Yes they're no Netopia or Cisco or Sonicwall router....but IMHO, they are the best "home market router" out there. By "home market router"...I mean routers for the average home user with the average home network for under 100 dollars.
If two in a row went on you, I'd start looking at its environment....is it in a quality surge strip? (not some 9 dollar so called surge strip...those are really just extension cords...a good surge strip will be at least 20 bucks). Good quality patch cables? Or home made ones?
You don't have it located on something that emits EMI or other stuff, do you? One person I know placed their Linksys router right on top of a massive sub-woofer...and wondered why it acted up, locked up, and eventually croaked. Well DUH...you have it sitting on top of a huge magnet...you don't put electronics like that right next to something like that. Replaced the router....made her move it to a different spot...haven't heard since.
I prefer NAT routers over any software firewall.
MORNING WOOD Lumber Company
Guinness for Strength!!!
The dates may be old on that article, but there are still vulnerabilities with the NEW firmware. SO right back at ya
BTW I haven't installed over 200 Linksys routers..........I'm the one who has to fix the sheeeatt after they're installed. I figure I do about 5 networking calls a day, times 5 days a week, so I've looked at easily 200 in one month alone.
Soltek Nforce2 75-FRNL2 VDD @ 1.7
XP2500 Barton 204x11 @ stock voltage
Thermalright SK7 w/39cfm Panaflo fan 35C idle
2x256 Kingston PC3200 2.5 CAS with pretty blue heat spreaders , running 6-2-2-2.0 @2.6V
Old AMD HS on Northbridge
Radeon 9500 128 modded to 9700 370/300 Ramsinks+Barton Retail HS http://service.futuremark.com/compare?2k1=6718429 http://service.futuremark.com/compare?2k3=995355
Maxtor 80GB HD w/ 8meg cache
Lite On 48x burner and 16x DVD
Logitech Z-640's
Chaintech 5.1 SC
Enlight 420watt dual fan PS
It appears that you have a bit of experience with routers Massive Overkil, so what kind of problems do you see with them? I don't install or fix as many as you or YOSC but they seem to be the most reliable I have come across for the home user. Netgear seems to cause the most problems from what I see. What router would you recommend then?
Originally posted by Massive Overkil
BTW I haven't installed over 200 Linksys routers..........I'm the one who has to fix the sheeeatt after they're installed.
Same here...install/setup/support. Not all my clients can afford Sonicwalls, Netopias, Symantec, or other high end routers like I'd like them to. For the small office on a budget, to get a small network on the internet with affordable bandwidth, these little guys do the job. And BTW I've yet to have any issue with these little routers and all these so called wide spread vulnerabilities, if one gets hacked/hosed...replace it...who the heck cares....75 bucks, replace it, end of problem. What is all this "sheeeatt" you have to fix?
I've seen so called hacks/vulnerabilities for Cisco routers also. Heck, look at Microsoft Windows? Lots of vulnerabilities...does that man it sucks and the world shouldn't use it? Using thd old noggin, being somewhat smart...(most people can....)...you can avoid the problems. Updates are free, and easy to implement.
MORNING WOOD Lumber Company
Guinness for Strength!!!
I'm by no means a router expert. I will tell you that the majority of Microsoft and Belkin's routers also suck. I'm starting to lean towards D-link. Linksys wireless USB adapters also suck.
The Linksys engineers don't seem to have an answer for the problem we're seeing now. They are coming with a beta firmware which we hope works. We'll see.
I use to hate 2wire until we started using Linksys. The only main problem with the 2wire stuff was with the various adapters, which were mostly driver issues.
Soltek Nforce2 75-FRNL2 VDD @ 1.7
XP2500 Barton 204x11 @ stock voltage
Thermalright SK7 w/39cfm Panaflo fan 35C idle
2x256 Kingston PC3200 2.5 CAS with pretty blue heat spreaders , running 6-2-2-2.0 @2.6V
Old AMD HS on Northbridge
Radeon 9500 128 modded to 9700 370/300 Ramsinks+Barton Retail HS http://service.futuremark.com/compare?2k1=6718429 http://service.futuremark.com/compare?2k3=995355
Maxtor 80GB HD w/ 8meg cache
Lite On 48x burner and 16x DVD
Logitech Z-640's
Chaintech 5.1 SC
Enlight 420watt dual fan PS