Quote:
Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq
None of the A or B hardware revisions are supported by dd-wrt, and nor is the E2 revision.
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The router database has been updated as recently as December 2010 and apparently all revisions post A/B minus E2 as you mentioned are supported. It's been accurate in the past and forum posts tend to back things up, so I have no reason to doubt it'll work. Odds are you'll get a compatible one.
Quote:
Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq
like I've said before, seperate modem and router (or bridge mode) aren't universal, even on "premum broadband packages" from the competition, we're just too used to it as it's always been the norm on cable.
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I know, and I agree that for most users this is fine. No arguments at all. But if you want to go chopping and changing things to make your home LAN more versatile, there shouldn't be stumbling blocks along the way.
As I've mentioned as much as I'd resent the expense of shelling out for my own gear at first, if VM were happy to support any modem MAC and have it be the customer's responsibility to make sure it's suitable for the purpose that'd be fine too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by *sloman*
Asked about superhub on twitter its £75?!?!?!?!
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Yeah, and it's not worth that in it's current state. The firmware isn't up to task.
Quote:
Originally Posted by whizzard
R08 is for the Hub. R09 for the Hub is also in testing. Super Hub is on R20 with R21 due shortly.
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...and how's that bridge mode for the Super Hub coming? Is it still Q2 2011?

---------- Post added at 13:42 ---------- Previous post was at 13:31 ----------
Talking of DD-WRT capable routers, this one looks good.
TP-Link TL-WR1043ND Ultimate Wireless N Gigabit Router
32MB RAM, 8MB Flash so you can get the full version on there. Also got a USB2 port for adding external storage as a rudimentary NAS. This is exactly the kind of product I'm talking about for making your home LAN really powerful. And it's cheap... cost you less than one of those WNR2000s!