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A Telecommunications Engineer, chance led me to the translation industry, where after a few years, I discovered another side of the world of technology while translating what others were writing about mobile applications and software. That... Susana Arjona
I have a similar issue as follows: I have two Magic Home LED WiFi controllers, LED Strips and Magic Home app. I cannot get either of the controllers to connect to the app via WiFi router BT Home Hub). I can connect WiFi direct. When trying to connect via WiFi router the app does not find the RGBW controller and yet I can see the controller is connected to the WiFI router in the router DHCP table. Has anyone else experienced this and do they know how to fix it please?
I purchased a pack of three. I only use them for about an hour each day. Each bulb has only lasted about a month. Very disappointed. I get the message that the light is not connected to wifi, and I cannot get it to reconnect. The light will flash briefly when I try to turn it on manually, but will not stay on. Looking for a better alternative!
By the way. It took ages, but I have received this and it works fine in the old app, but the crashes everytime you change a setting in the new app (get an error about time out, any time I change a setting) not very inspiring for moving to the new app, but anyway.
I would prefer that my laptop not be woken up remotely under any circumstances. I've disabled Allow this device to wake the computer on the Power Management tab, but these settings appear to be separate. My assumption is that I can set these two settings to Disabled without negative consequences. Is that right?
Wake on Magic Packet causes the network card to awaken the computer when it receives a magic packet. A packet is considered "magic" when it contains FF FF FF FF FF FF (six instances of the largest possible byte value) followed by sixteen instances of the card's six-byte MAC address. That sequence can appear anywhere within the frame, so the packet can be sent over any higher-level protocol. Usually, UDP is used, but sometimes raw frames with EtherType 0x0842 are used. (Source: Wikipedia.)
Wake on Pattern Match is a superset of the previous. It will cause the card to wake the machine when various things come in, including a magic packet, a NetBIOS name query, a TCP SYN packet (either TCPv4 or TCPv6), etc. Those last ones may require ARP offload to be enabled. (Source: TechNet.)
These two settings form a feature of most modern computers known as "Wake on LAN"; in a nutshell, leaving this setting on allows the network card of your system to receive sufficient power to remain in standby mode, while the rest of the system is powered off. While in standby mode, it may receive a "magic packet" - a small amount of data specific to the mac address of the network card - and will respond to this by turning on the system. Very useful for remote control situations, however you are absolutely right that you may disable these features without any negative consequences - kudos to you for doing some prior research too.
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In the summer you can work from your balcony and in the winter from your living room, in the kitchen in the morning, in the attic in the evening. devolo Magic 1 WiFi allows your work station to follow you wherever you go. It is absolutely reliable and enchantingly secure. Via tablet, smartphone, laptop, or PC.
Bring the internet to every corner of your home. The magical WiFi amplifier from devolo ensures that you can surf and stream as much as you want, from your basement workshop to your garden house. In multiple rooms at once, with fantastic stability, and at a fabulous 1200 Mbps.
Wherever you go, the magical internet goes with you. Amazingly simple via the power socket. Connect your stationary devices, such as a Smart TV, game console, or PC, to the Powerline adapter. Set up your WiFi net and see how it reaches the farthest corners of your home.
Connect your PC, game console, or receiver to the devolo Magic adapters with amazing ease. The integrated power socket with child safety means that you lose no wall sockets, nor do you need to worry about compatibility. devolo Magic 1 WiFi uses the G.hn standard, functions with any type of router.
So that you don't lose track of everything, the intuitive Home Network App ensures that you can easily keep an eye on all connected adapters via your smartphone. At the same time, you can easily set up parental controls, guest Wi-Fi and time control via the Home Network App.
guys if I write here because I need help from someone who knows more than me obviously ...
It is a lot of time that I try to make this blessed sketch that should send a magic packet to 'address provided by Arduino WiFi shield r3 (original and updated latest firmware) on MEGA 2560 ADK. To avoid unnecessary waste of time I state that the hardware is ad-hoc
and everything works fine except the most important step that is sending the UDP package containing the magic packet by the 'Arduino, and reception by the target of the MAC and so on is all ok. Also using wireshark I made a doublecheck that actually the target PC does not receive any package except the ARP when the Arduino is booted. So despite receiving the Arduino via serial command and logs off serialprint it doesn't send any packets to the target nor to the subnet.
Obviously no compiling or loading errors whatsoever. I also tried changing from port 9 which is the default for the WOL, I tried to change them with other compatible without ever being able to see anything coming to 192.168.1.101 (target).
Are you sure that the WIFI shield you are using can actually send a WOL packet?
WOL isnt designed to operate over wifi, only hard wired Ethernet, as WIFI cards dont have the capability to
power up a computer from its off state.
If you don't see a packet on the LAN then it is getting dropped somewhere. Perhaps you should send to the LAN broadcast address (192.168.255.255) instead of the specific address. Is the destination machine wireless or wired? If it's wired you might want to try a cheap Ethernet shield and sending through the wired network.
Please; is there any where I could find a clear way to perform the task of installing Openwrt on my adapter for a newbie like me who isn't used to CLI? I know I need putty to access the machine via ssh plus a TFTP server. My problem starts from step 4 to step 6; unfortunately.
Also, while I don't have this device, the notes at the end appear to state that the PLC functions are not working in openwrt, if you need these do not proceed. You may want to contact the submitter to see if they have a work around (like installing the non-free components from the original firmware). To do that you will need to get familiar with the command line.
lf this is the first time you've installed openwrt on a device - perhaps try with a device that is better supported first, such as a router and get yourself familiar with ssh and commandline uci - before tackling a more complex device like a PLC access point.
Some PLCs present as an ethernet interface to the SOC running openwrt, but this is not always the case, if the committer states it won't work I'd be inclined to think this is one of the 'other' cases.
The OEM firmware is also based on OpenWRT. Sources and extractable firmware images are provided by Devolo. Possibly it would be easier to enable the PLC after first getting a shell prompt with that firmware? Maybe ssh or telnet could be enabled for the OEM firmware.
The startup section of the dropbear init script contains a line to just 'return' when some condition is true, which depends on a few more conditions. Those you can derive from the other scripts. Note that some of those conditions also have other side effects.
The command ghn_console provides insight in the G.hn powerline network. The ver command outputs a version number that seems to fit in the numbering scheme used by the Magic 2 LAN firmware (the device without WiFi that doesn't seem to use OpenWRT). Possibly the G.hn device runs fully independently and this is the entry point into it.
I do not see a distinct ethernet device for the G.hn interface. The one listed is using the MAC address of the LAN interface and is according to brctl only bridge with the wireless interfaces. I suspect that there is another independent switch and the G.hn interface and UTP wired ethernet interface are hooked up together to that. This independent separate environment might resemble a Magic 2 LAN, but running a lighter version of its firmware.
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