I've installed three homeplug sets and 5 wirelesses.
The three homeplugs were working within a minute of unpacking and plugging in. I got them from Solwise, and basically they stayed tthat way. Two of my own early plugs failed, one outside the guarantee period. This was the first one, and the only one that had any problems, but it was early days for homeplug. Solwise cheerfully replaced them by return mail, and on the second occasion when I told them they were outside guarantee, the answer was 'Oh don't worry about it'.
Its super easy to tell what's happening with the Solwise: you either have three lights or you don't. And you just plug in a spare, assuming you have one. If it works, you know.
Of the wireless ones, only one has been trouble free either to get working or more worrying, keep working. This one is with a Buffalo wireless router going into a Cable modem. The others had a variety of issues and were from several suppliers, and with Mac and PC both. Two worked perfectly, but later stopped working (and they are remote, so I don't know why). One gave all kinds of mysterious intermittent problems. One worked fine on a Mac, worked with a laptop, and then stopped working first on the laptop and then on the Mac. I asked the owner if he wanted me to come by, but he said he was fed up and bought some Solwise units which he did himself with no problems and wondered why he had not done that sooner. The latest wireless to go poof did so last week, after working fine for a year, and with no change of the connected computers.
The problem is, some elderly lady is on the phone from a remote city, and its very hard to either get a coherent description of what's happening, or be sure that what you ask to have done is really happening. This is with wireless. On the other hand, look at the plug and tell me how many lights are on is very easy.
So I now tell people:
(1) get homeplug (2) get it from Solwise (3) you really want wireless, then -get the Buffalo - that is, get a separate access point not a wireless modem/router -get a man in. I don't do that anymore....
The netgear 5 port wired modem router has been fine. I've put in three or four of those. The great thing is it runs cool, it seems very reliable, and the user interface is easy for people to use. By contrast, the bargain wired router/modem from ebuyer works fine once its in, but heaven help the ordinary user who tries to set it up.
Well, just my own experience.
Peter
Peter Alcibiades wrote:
Its super easy to tell what's happening with the Solwise: you either have three lights or you don't. And you just plug in a spare, assuming you have one. If it works, you know.
An obvious (to those who've used them) point that I don't think has been mentioned yet is that from a Linux point of view (back on topic!) you're connecting into a network hub, and you therefore need the same drivers as you would to plug into any other hub - ie none.
The same applies if you're trying to connect your games console, network media player, etc; it's just a network port, no drivers needed.
If you routinely use access points rather than wireless adapters you get the same benefits on wireless, but compared with the £10 USB dongles that have been mentioned in this thread, on Linux certainly (and on Windows too in my opinion) this is a big benefit to the homeplugs.
Well, just my own experience.
Mine too!
I can second Solwise's support, both in their forums and direct. As a reseller we rely on this more than the average punter as we do have to deal with returns and support, but they're a friendly bunch to deal with.