Tech Support > Computers & Technology > Internet & Broadband > Need help with wireless modem/router
Need help with wireless modem/router
Posted by John on January 10th, 2008


Or to be more precise, buying one.

I posted three or four weeks ago saying that my Linksys WAG54GS had died on
the wireless side and I was asking for suggestions for a replacement. I need
QoS functionallity and, because I let my next-door neighbour piggy-back on
my account wirelessly, the wireless connection has to be solid and reliable
(only about 30m and one brick wall apart), because I don't want the
neighbour knocking on the door every two minutes saying that their
connection has dropped.

Unfortunately, the only suggestion at the time was a Netgear DG834GT - but
after downloading the spec. sheet from Netgear, I know that it doesn't do
QoS.

So I'm now hoping that there are some new people reading this and some new
suggestions will come forth 'cos I'm getting desperate now - limping along
on my old BT Voyager 2091 at the mo.

Cheers,

John


Posted by Peter Crosland on January 10th, 2008


John wrote:
Take a look at the Draytek 2800G

Peter Crosland



Posted by ato_zee@hotmail.com on January 10th, 2008



Bit of a tall order, the brick wall and 30m.
Might be worth one end at least with a USB adapter
and reflector.
I've had success with various reflectors, best
seems to take the bulbholder and switch out of
an old Anglepoise lamp, then fit a cable grommet
in place of the switch, some brass tube to
thread the USB cable through and support
the adapter.
It's not a true parabola but near enough,
sliding the tube in and out finds a sort of focus.
Reception seems polarised, rotating the tube
peaks the signal.
A Poundland mini-tripod head on the Anglepoise
cast iron base provides az/elev adjustment.
A Google search will reveal many and
wonderful reflector designs, a large plastic
flowerpot and ali kitchen foil is also good.
BBC's Click featured a viable African tin can
reflector network covering long distances
relaying point to point and connecting
isolated communities.

Posted by tony h on January 10th, 2008


John wrote:
which, at the time, i told you. (another poster suggested it)



Posted by John on January 10th, 2008



"Peter Crosland" <g6jns@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:13ocm02hq5gpq90@corp.supernews.com...
Will do Peter, thanks.

John



Posted by John on January 10th, 2008



<ato_zee@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:4786583d$0$13923$fa0fcedb@news.zen.co.uk...
DOH!!! Sorry, my mistake. I haven't got a clue why my finger hit the "3" key
( Actual distance is no more than 20m and probably closer to 15 - can't
even blame it on beer at the time I posted )

We've been successful with the Linksys for over 2 years anyway.


Cheers Ato,

John



Posted by John on January 10th, 2008



"tony h" <me@home.com> wrote in message
news:fm5nlt$7m2$1@news.albasani.net...
Quite right, sir. I forgot (

Cheers,

John



Posted by john on January 11th, 2008



"John" <none@used.co> wrote in message
news:L-idnR_CgOjQzRvanZ2dnUVZ8selnZ2d@bt.com...
How stupid are you for letting a neighbour do that. Do you realise that
legally you are responsible for anything they do on your connection? It's
your IP number and subscriber details that will be traced. Your neighbour
will deny all knowledge.

Well I have one and it does have QoS. Mine is the version 3.

Why change it if it works. If you just want one with QoS then I don't think
you understand what it is. It's not the same as packet shaping or
preference and it wouldn't work with two PCs at the same time. It will not
split the connection between you to give equal use or anything. The only
way to do that is have your neighbour hook up to your PC and run cfosspeed.
That will ensure equal use and give priority to web browsing and email
before P2P.





Posted by tony h on January 11th, 2008


john wrote:
different chipset inside, different functionality, 834 has qos, though i'm
not sure if its accessable from the interface (192..). totally different
firmware also.



Posted by John on January 11th, 2008



"john" <john,nolan@vrs21.co.uk> wrote in message
news:4786cf2c$1_1@mk-nntp-2.news.uk.tiscali.com...
My next-door neighbours are rather decent people. He is 79-years old, she is
84 and are very light users, mainly just emails/Skype to relatives around
the world. I just didn't think it was worth all the hassle and expense of
them setting up their own account for such light use so I allow them to
piggy-back on mine. I have no worries whatsoever about their behaviour
online.


I can only point you to the pdf spec sheet available here:
http://www.netgear.co.uk/pdfs/dg834gt.pdf

The clue is in the phrase "limping along on my old...." The old 2091 works,
but not very well, which is why I ditched it for the Linksys in the first
place. It's OK as a standby until I get something better, but that's about
it.

I need QoS to allocate dedicated bandwidth to my BT Vision service, and
possibly VoIP, if/when I decide to set them up - nothing whatsoever to do
with sharing my account with my neighbour. And I can assure you, I do know
what QoS is and what it does.

If you can't answer the question sensibly, (come to think of it, you haven't
answered the question *at all* unless I missed your suggestions for a
suitable replacement router) please don't reply at all.

John

John



Posted by Jim Crowther on January 15th, 2008


In uk.telecom.broadband, on Thu, 10 Jan 2008 17:05:21, John wrote:

My cheapo Philips (Model: SNA6500) wifi/modem/router has Qos and a lot
more. Last seen on special offer in Tescos of all places..

--
Jim Crowther