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Every now and then, I'd encounter a lock-up, and I'd just reset everything (modem, computer & the router) to get it working again. I initially figured it was the cable company, the modem or something with my computer. the 1.5M I had). Eventually, I bought a DLink router and it works flawlessly. In fact some of the versions are worse, causing the unit to lock up during even light internet activity like e-mail. The horror story of the BEFSR11 could end there, but sadly it does not.Recently, I moved to a new house and my new cable company has a much higher download speed (7.5 M vs. This lock-up failure is easily repeated and reproduced.
I've tried all versions of the firmware, and none of them fix the problem. When this occurs, there is no way to clear it besides powering it off (such as by pulling the cord). It's simply not worth the frustration. Other people I've met with this series of router have had the exact same problems, and all the evidence points to a severe design flaw with the BEFSR11 itself. Allow it to stay off for about 10 seconds, and then power it back up. At first, I was just doing some light surfing and e-mail, and it almost seemed to be working. But those initial assumptions were wrong.After deeper investigation, I tracked down the problem to the router.
After this it usually begins working again.at least until the next time it locks up.minutes, hours or days later depending on how much internet traffic you're producing. My trusty D-Link router is still back at the other house where my wife is living and working until we complete the final move to our new house. Even if you can get one for free, avoid this router. I've owned this router for several years. With a heavier traffic load (such as downloading large files, online gaming, etc), the router will lock up. In the meantime, I tried using this Linksys router again, (hoping for a miracle I guess), but with the heavier traffic volume I'm able to produce with the 5x speed improvement, the router now locks up almost immediately.
It's now in the garbage, as the cheap flimsy case isn't even useful as a door stop. The thing BARELY works, it locks up, linksys' support is a joke, their latest firmware still doesn't help. I pulled it out the other day for a different application, and now I remember why it was in the drawer. the problem is they don't care. This thing is a piece of garbage. I had one sitting in a drawer that I quit using a while back (replace with something better). You'd think in 3 years they could fix the bugs.
Also remember it only has one port, If I bought a router today I'd get the standard a standard multiport. it will not reset the password. I've been using this model for two months. I can still connect to the internet through it, but I can't change any settings because even when I power it down, hit the reset, do both at once etc. It may be fixable by updating firmware, but that's a pain.
Do yourself a favour, and don't buy Linksys. There ought to be a class action lawsuit against Linksys for making a product this poor - there is simply no excuse. This router is a piece of garbage. I've known several people who have these (or the 4 port version) and they all have problems with it locking up, and there is no way to fix it besides pulling the plug. Didn't they do any testing at all before releasing it to the public.Their ethernet cards are total garbage too - they cause your computer to spontaneously reboot under heavy network traffic.
Reliability. Weaknesses: No command-line interface.
I still install a software firewall behind the router on each of my workstations as the NAT that the router performs is still not enough to block eberything out. This is actually the second one of these I've purchased.
Summary: I bought the Linksys versus any other brand of DSL/cable router both for it's past performance as well as for the price. The router has performed well and yet to have an issue.
Strengths: Price. Ease of use/installation.
I installed the first in my home network and then purchased an additional one for my brother.
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