Tony van der Hoff writes: > AFAIAA all netgear (and most other) routers have an optional telnet > interface. Why bother with a browser?
I telnetted to our router after getting on our network and it did make a connection but nothing happens after that which means that port 23 is responding so I will see if these new NetGear devices have a telnet engine. hiding in there somewhere. That would be so much easier and one could even script a setup session with expect, etc. I did successfully use safari on a Macintosh to set up one of these routers but safari kept dropping out of the html page and I had to keep getting my place back which is a real and royal pain and I wasn't even changing the interface settings on the router. I think it is just the javascript not quite fitting with safari. The second router which is a bit more complicated fights even harder to be configured. Last Saturday, I think I wasted 3 hours fighting with this issue and probably only spent 10 or 20 minutes actually configuring the wireless network which is going to be straight-forward as soon as I can get something to talk to it which doesn't have this mechanized form of attention deficit disorder. Maybe it's me that's got it anyway. Who knows? I want to thank all 3 who replied to my initial post. At least I know now what www-browser actually does. Martin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201302271805.r1ri5voy086...@x.it.okstate.edu