 Reviews:
·RoadRunner Cable
·AT&T U-Verse
| reply to doubleohwhat
Re: New speeds coming said by doubleohwhat:You may or may not have this information but I figured I'd ask all the same: 1) Do you know the model of the new gateway? 2) Do you know if it will support proper bridging? 1) Motorola NVG589 »www.motorola.com/us/consumers/NV···,pd.html This link indicted that Motorola NVG589 is coming to At&t Uverse
Pace 5168NV and 5111NV Pace own 2Wire so its possible that Pace 5168NV is coming soon too. Pace 5111NV is for adsl2+ Uverse internet. Dont know if 5111NV will be release or not.
2) Well, imo, I dont think so :/ however you can put your router as DMZ+? -- Curious about Sprint improved 3G and growing 4G LTE network? Then check it out at www.s4gru.com
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 | said by dragonman300:Well, imo, I dont think so :/ however you can put your router as DMZ+? That works for most people but if you have a block of IPs you need to pass through to your router, you're pretty much stuck. Hopefully it'll be the Motorola. They have a history of being "hackable". |
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 cwh join:2006-05-14 San Antonio, TX | reply to dragonman300 Pace 5168NV and 5111NV Pace own 2Wire so its possible that Pace 5168NV is coming soon too. Pace 5111NV is for adsl2+ Uverse internet. Dont know if 5111NV will be release or not.
My neighbor recently had uverse installed. I did not check the model number of his rg, but it looked quite similar to these. |
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 | It is possible that your neighbor have 2Wire 3801. You can google it  |
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 | reply to cwh IPDSL- is using the Mot devices. IPDSL is called U-verse. |
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 | reply to doubleohwhat said by doubleohwhat:said by dragonman300:Well, imo, I dont think so :/ however you can put your router as DMZ+? That works for most people but if you have a block of IPs you need to pass through to your router, you're pretty much stuck. Hopefully it'll be the Motorola. They have a history of being "hackable". Actually, if you have the block of static IPs the Motorola NVG510 (ADSL2+) supports pass-through BEAUTIFULLY right out of the box, no hacking needed 
/M |
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 | said by mackey:Actually, if you have the block of static IPs the Motorola NVG510 (ADSL2+) supports pass-through BEAUTIFULLY right out of the box, no hacking needed 
/M Yep. I know several people who have used that modem with a block of IPs with success. However, those of us on VDSL are still stuck up a tree with no solution (to my knowledge anyway). |
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 | reply to dragonman300 said by dragonman300:said by doubleohwhat:You may or may not have this information but I figured I'd ask all the same: 1) Do you know the model of the new gateway? 2) Do you know if it will support proper bridging? 1) Motorola NVG589 » www.motorola.com/us/consumers/NV···,pd.htmlThis link indicted that Motorola NVG589 is coming to At&t Uverse It's clear the NVG589 is built for AT&T; the product photos and user manual have "AT&T" plastered all over them. It looks very much like the NVG510.
The OP claimed the new RG will have "dual band" 5GHz capability; the NVG589 does not have this however. None of the testing or other docs at the FCC site mention anything about operating in the 5 GHz band; they do however say it's 2x2 MIMO in the 2.4GHz B/G/N band.
Basic overview is: Single and 2-pair bonded VDSL and ADSL2+ WAN Gigabit Ethernet WAN port for FTTP/ONT installs HPNA 3.1 coax port 4x Gigabit Ethernet LAN ports 2x FXS VoIP ports 1x USB 2.0 400 mW wireless radio
The posted NVG589 user manual makes no mention of the "Cascaded Router" or 1:1 NAT features the NVG510 is capable of, but I don't think the posted manual for the NVG510 had it listed either. It does seem to have the same "legendary" IP Passthrough options as the NVG510 though 
/M |
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