elfs: (Default)
[personal profile] elfs
I got home this evening to have Omaha tell me that we had no wireless. The two wired machines still had Internet access, so the router was fine. The old bridge, a Linksys WAP11 v1.1 showed a solid light on above its ethernet port, and no light at all on the wireless port. Every attempt to communicate with it, either via ethernet or the USB connector, was rebuffed. The thing was dead.

After dinner I drove out to Frys and in an hour had a new 802.11g Linksys WAP54G up and running. I even reprogrammed it to use DHCPC so I won't have to scan the entire network looking for the damn thing next time, and told my DHCPC server to preserve its MAC-to-IP address across reboots. It has better security now. Yamaraashi-chan was having a nastier case of Internet withdrawl than either Omaha or I.

But how does this happen? Linksys WAPs are solid state. It's sat in our pantry for the past eight years (the last time I downloaded drivers for it, the most common version of Windows was 98!), quietly ticking away, doing its job. It has no fan, no hard drive, no moving parts at all. I've only updated the flash four or five times in its life. Why would it suddenly just keel over and die in the middle of a transaction like that?

Date: 2008-12-07 05:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gromm.livejournal.com
Our tech support desk (of which I used to belong) gets that very same question all the time.

Except you *know* that their eyes will glaze over the moment you give them any kind of technical explanation like those listed here.

Here's a better explanation: because your bridge cost $79.95, not $495. It has cheap components in it that will likely fail sooner than later. Your bridge lasted 8 years, and that's far beyond its useful lifetime. As you've noted, it's long past obsolete.

More than likely, one of those cheap components was a capacitor, as previously noted. It's also worth noting that to find and replace that component would cost more in labour than it would to replace the whole thing. Electronics are like that.

Profile

elfs: (Default)
Elf Sternberg

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 12345 6
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 6th, 2026 03:10 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios