Tech Support > Computer Hardware > Storage Devices > NDAS and Ximeta - very slow via wireless
NDAS and Ximeta - very slow via wireless
Posted by fab@eek.dk on April 10th, 2007


Hi guys,

I recently bought a multimedia center using the NDAS technology. I
must say that using a wireless connection the connection between my
laptop and the NDAS is extremely unstable (freezes the laptop
"randomly" and it takes several seconds to access any files whether on
the NDAS drive or locally, which ofcourse makes the technology
useless)

THATS WHY I'm thinking - maybe someone out there had good experience
with an NDAS drive via wireless for copying 300-600mb files - and
maybe you would like to share that knowledge.

I remember reading somewhere on the Ximeta board that some people
experienced a lag due to a network conflict, and that NDAS took
forever to handle that conflict - but I never got to realize if Ximeta
has fixed this problem, or if its a problem at all.

Any help or comments much appreciated,

Frederik

Posted by Arno Wagner on April 11th, 2007


Previously fab@eek.dk wrote:

Posted by theshoeshineboy on May 14th, 2008



I have DELL XPS M140 (that comes with Intel 2200BG wireless card) and
Netgear WGR614 v6 router (54mbps b/g).

This is what I did:
In Router -
1. Updated the driver (got it from Netgear's support site)
2. In the router switched to "Mode G only" and channel 11.
3. Left rest of the settings "as is". (I use 128bit encrypted WE
security)
In Wireless card (in the laptop) -
1. Updated the driver (got it from Intel's support site)
2. Went into Device Manager and updated card's properties as follows:
a. set it to only use "mode g" and channel 11
b. specifically set the speed to 54mbps (default is "best")

I spent **lot** of hours figuring this out. Tried tonnes o
combinations and am pretty sure that the above steps helped me get it t
work the way I wanted. Just upgrading drivers didn't help; just updatin
settings without updating drivers also didn't help. And every setting (
mentioned above) has a signficant role in making it to work. For mor
details, please pick up a router book and read what is "mode g" and wha
are "channels", etc. and you'll know why I set it to specifically "mod
g" and why I used channel 11 and not 1 or 3 or 5.

So, if you have similar set up you might try out the above solution. N
need to get 100mbps super G router or any thing... basic audio jus
works fine. I haven't yet tried dumping Gigs of data yet... will tr
that this weekend. Eventually I want to be able to dump my backup file
to this wireless drive. I'm guessing I might need to upgrade my route
and card to 100mbps super G router then - let's see... But in a nu
shell ximeta does what it says and they do it perfectly... however o
the downside, support sucks, documentation sucks.

It's unfortunate that such things are still so complicated... I work i
the router industry (in the valley) and I could make it to work becaus
I know how routers work and I went configuring things reall
systematically. I never followed what any post on the internet sai
unless it made sense to me and I knew what I was doing. I certainl
don't expect any peprson (even in the computer industry) to make it t
work easily.

BTW, LAN connection worked like a charm for me. It was certainly slowe
than the USB connection, but the speed was far enough for my needs
However I don't need LAN


Posted by Gumby on May 14th, 2008


theshoeshineboy <theshoeshineboy.39e0v9@no.email.invalid> wrote in
news:theshoeshineboy.39e0v9@no.email.invalid:

Why WEP? WPA is more secure.


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