Last night, I tried the telnet console and it works on both of the routers in question. You get a Unix shell, the ash, to be specific. If you type the word help you get a list of available commands which is good but I am not sure if this is going to get me in to setting up the router because I have yet to find any configuration commands although I haven't given up just yet.
The file structure is classic Unix and one would expect to see a lot of configuration files in /etc but there aren't much more than resolv.conf which is a link to the resolv.conf file found in /tmp. It becomes populated with a list of the DNS's provided by the internet provider. I did find an application called routerinfo which is very nice to know about because it gives you the router's serial number and OS revision. It also looks like the router would work with some sort of time synchronization system. It didn't appear to have this working, however. I work in our Network Operations group for IT at OSU and I have seen the command line interface for Cisco and other enterprise-level routers. Once you get logged in to the proper privilege, you can issue commands that fully configure the router or switch. I don't expect to find the same commands on the NetGears but I haven't seen anything that looks like it could effect the router's settings and that was my goal at the start. Ideally, I want to loose the web gui and still setup the router and WiFi interface. One of these boxes even has both a 2.4 and 5.8 GHZ transceiver. Anyway, I will keep poking at them and I guess I should redouble efforts to get gnome with the speech synthesizer working to give iceweasle a try. Martin McCormick -- 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/201302281654.r1sgs6ne096...@x.it.okstate.edu