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D-Link 300T
Reviews Views Date of last review
3 12901 07-22-2005
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Recommended By Average Price Average Rating
67% of reviewers $48.00 4.0



Description: That's it really; it is an ADSL Ethernet modem. You plug a wire into the splitter and another wire into the PC. It runs a small
linux OS and includes a firewall. It worked well with Windows ME but froze when trying ftp in Linux (Red Hat 8.0). This was with the January 2004 firmware.
Keywords: ADSL Ethernet modem
Connection Type: ethernet


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Old 12-02-2004, 02:18 PM   #1
whittycat
 
Registered: Nov 2004
Distribution: Debian lenny, also DSL-N
Posts: 32

Rep: Reputation:
Would you recommend the product? no | Price you paid? (in USD): $30.00 | Rating: 1

Kernel (uname -r): 2.4.19
Distribution: Red Hat 8.0



This worked ok with Windows ME, including ftp, but froze when I tried to run
ftp under linux. I had to open another VT and kill the process. Thsi was with the January 2004 firmware. I tried updating the firmware but something went wrong and the modem died.
 
Old 03-02-2005, 04:18 PM   #2
berrance
 
Registered: Aug 2004
Distribution: Ubunto and slowly switching to debian
Posts: 306

Rep: Reputation: Reputation:
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): None indicated | Rating: 4

Kernel (uname -r): 2.6.5-7.145-smp
Distribution: sles


runs well but tends to run slow after a bit of time and to reset it you also ihave to re-set the ethernet connection its connected to if its directly connected to your machine, i havent updated the firmware as yet so this may be fixed other wise very easy to use and setup
 
Old 07-22-2005, 02:18 PM   #3
lesleyb
 
Registered: Sep 2003
Distribution: Debian, OpenBSD 3.9 & 3.7
Posts: 79

Rep: Reputation: Reputation: Reputation:
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $66.00 | Rating: 7

Kernel (uname -r): 2.6.8-24.16-default
Distribution: SuSE 9.2 Professional


I got this Ethernet modem from www.ebuyer.co.uk

It's ok. There's really no problem connecting to it from SuSE because it uses an Ethernet connection to the box and pppoA on the other side to the phone line.

The factory defaults are for a management IP address and a dhcp server assigning an IP address to the NiC.

You use the management IP address in a browser to access the set up pages delivered from a web server on the modem. From there you can set the modem's system time, set up the modem and connection details and away you go. There's a system log and you can save all your system settings so that they'll still be there after a power down.


My ISP delivers a fixed IP address and, even when both the modem and the NiC are set to dhcp, the NiC gets the fixed IP address. The modem seems to act in a bridged mode

<pre>
Sep 8 12:00:06> Valid Configuration Tree
Sep 8 12:00:11> Firewall NAT service started
Sep 8 12:00:11> Bridge Created: br0
Sep 8 12:00:11> Bridge Interface Added: eth0
</pre>

despite the fact I have selected PPPoA as the connection type.

I now use it without dhcp on either the NiC or being served from the modem.

It's not a router and is designed to be connected to one computer. It suits me because I am now using it with an OpenBSD machine acting as my firewall and router for my LANs.

The problems I have experienced are :

The management web pages don't work with Lynx because they've used javascript to process the click on the button.

An inability to change the management IP address of the modem. The whole thing seizes up and despite explicit routes being set, it's impossible to get back to the management interface. Hitting the factory reste button is the only way to retrieve the situation. This means a total reconfigure of the modem.

PPPoA on the box seems to suffer as much as the PPPoA I was using with the Alcatel Speedtouch modem from dropped ISP connections. To be honest my ISP doesn't drop connections that often but I get a message concerning Resource(s) in use in the logs and the modem has to be powered down and then powered back up to get the ADSL line to come back up again properly.

If something is set to be a dhcp server I kind of expect it to be a dhcp server but it insists on passing the fixed IP address thru to the NiC. This makes routing interesting :).

Overall it seems fairly reliable. I have had it since March this year.
 




  



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