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BERNAMA - English Version
Thursday, March 7, 2024
Thursday, August 30, 2018
Asus router speed
100Mbps
- RT-N800HP
200Mbps
- RT-AC51U+
300Mbps
- RT-AC1200G+
- RT-AC58U
- RT-AC1300UHP
- Lyra
500Mbps
- RT-AC66U
- RT-AC67U
- RT-AC68U
- Lyra Trio
800Mbps
- Blue Cave
- RT-AC86U
- RT-AC88U
- RT–AC5300
- ROG Rapture GT-AC5300
Friday, August 17, 2018
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Router IP address of Linksys, ZTE, Billion and many other wireless or cable router / modems:
192.168.1.1, 192.168.2.1 or 192.168.0.1.
192.168.1.1, 192.168.2.1 or 192.168.0.1.
You can login to a typical router, modem, wireless router or cable dsl modem, with “admin” as the login name and “admin” as the password. Here are the default IP and password of some modem types:
ZTE modem:
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: ADSL
Password: expert03
Username: ZXDSL
Password: ZXDSL
Username: admin
Password: telekomst
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: ADSL
Password: expert03
Username: ZXDSL
Password: ZXDSL
Username: admin
Password: telekomst
ArtNet modem:
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: admin
Password: telekomst
Username: admin
Password: admin
Username: admin
Password: password
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: admin
Password: telekomst
Username: admin
Password: admin
Username: admin
Password: password
Aztech modem:
IP Address: 10.0.0.2 OR 192.168.1.1
Username: admin
Password: blank
Username: admin
Password: password
Username: admin
Password: admin
IP Address: 10.0.0.2 OR 192.168.1.1
Username: admin
Password: blank
Username: admin
Password: password
Username: admin
Password: admin
Hyundai HSE-220 Modem:
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: ADSL
Password: ADSL
Username: admin
Password: ADSL
Username: root
Password: root
IP Address: 192.168.1.1
Username: ADSL
Password: ADSL
Username: admin
Password: ADSL
Username: root
Password: root
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Although what is monitored and the exact name may be different depending on manufacturer, the overall information is pretty much the same. Below are some of the common terms and measurements used to judge line quality. Remember these are not hard numbers but simply a generalization of line statistics:
SN Margin (AKA Signal to Noise Margin or Signal to Noise Ratio)
Relative strength of the DSL signal to Noise ratio. 6dB is generally the lowest dB manufactures specify in order for the modem to be able to synch. In some instances interleaving can help raise the noise margin to an acceptable level. Generally speaking, as overall bandwidth increases, your signal to noise ratio decreases. So a customer that upgrades from 1.5 to 6.0 service will typically see a corresponding decrease in the signal to noise ratio. The higher the number the better for this measurement.
6dB or below is bad and will experience no synch or intermittent synch problems
7dB-10dB is fair but does not leave much room for variances in conditions
11dB-20dB is good with no synch problems
20dB-28dB is excellent
29dB or above is outstanding
Line Attenuation
Measure of how much the signal has degraded between the DSLAM and the modem. Maximum signal loss recommendation is usually about 60dB. One of the biggest factors affecting line attenuation is distance from the DSLAM. Generally speaking, bigger distances mean higher attenuation. The lower the dB the better for this measurement.
20dB and below is outstanding
20dB-30dB is excellent
30dB-40dB is very good
40dB-50dB is good
50dB-60dB is poor and may experience connectivity issues
60dB or above is bad and will experience connectivity issues
SN Margin (AKA Signal to Noise Margin or Signal to Noise Ratio)
Relative strength of the DSL signal to Noise ratio. 6dB is generally the lowest dB manufactures specify in order for the modem to be able to synch. In some instances interleaving can help raise the noise margin to an acceptable level. Generally speaking, as overall bandwidth increases, your signal to noise ratio decreases. So a customer that upgrades from 1.5 to 6.0 service will typically see a corresponding decrease in the signal to noise ratio. The higher the number the better for this measurement.
6dB or below is bad and will experience no synch or intermittent synch problems
7dB-10dB is fair but does not leave much room for variances in conditions
11dB-20dB is good with no synch problems
20dB-28dB is excellent
29dB or above is outstanding
Line Attenuation
Measure of how much the signal has degraded between the DSLAM and the modem. Maximum signal loss recommendation is usually about 60dB. One of the biggest factors affecting line attenuation is distance from the DSLAM. Generally speaking, bigger distances mean higher attenuation. The lower the dB the better for this measurement.
20dB and below is outstanding
20dB-30dB is excellent
30dB-40dB is very good
40dB-50dB is good
50dB-60dB is poor and may experience connectivity issues
60dB or above is bad and will experience connectivity issues
Monday, September 9, 2013
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