I'm not saying this is your issue but a few months back I had a
"similar" problem and it turned out to be my wireless card wasn't
exactly compatible with the latest IEEE 802.11N standard. Changing my
router to B/G solved the issue for me.

If nothing else, you could at least give it a try.


-- 
I challenge you to play the game in which there is no loser but
everything is fun and worthwhile!



--- Begin Message ---
On Thu, 2013-06-13 at 23:02 -0400, Doug Button wrote:
> Thanks for the help, but it doesn't sound quite like my problem. I 
> haven't changed any network settings and these problems are only 
> occurring on this one device.
> 
> I should probably also mention that according to lspci my WiFi model is 
> "Intel Corporation Centrino Wireless-N 1000 [Condor Peak]". Maybe I'm 
> missing a driver or something of that sort?
> 
> 

My problems were usually triggered by using large bandwidth over wifi,
so some devices weren't affected at all. Never assume your network
hasn't changed unless you know for a fact it hasn't, my ISP pushes
config changes to routers without notice.


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