I've had exactly the same problem over the last few years. I really
like the draytek routers and this is the only big issue ive ever had
with them. i used a 2820n vigor a year or two ago and now have a
2830n, which i hoped had new hardware and software and no such issues.
sadly not the
Wigster wrote:
I cannot get WB to connect to SBS: WB is complaining that the CLI
connection if offline, even though it does find the CLI server on port
9090.
Edit 2: After a bunch of restarts, this seems to have cleared itself up.
But I am not sure whether it is somehow related to the
Time for a set of Homeplug's? I use a Homeplug Turbo setup in my house
to connect LMS on a Windows Home Server with 2 x SB Touch and 1 x SB
Radio and it works fine.
pd_watkins2000's Profile:
Muppet9010 wrote:
The radio is linked to my local squeezebox server running on a mini pc
that is connected to the master router.
The master router has the adsl line, DHCP enabled and a wireless
signal.
The secondary router has DHCP disabled and a wireless signal.
The 2 routers are
I see here http://www.absoluteradio.co.uk/listen/on-other-devices.html
that absolute radio are trialing a lossless stream using ogg-flac tech.
Will this work on the SB3 ?
sorry if its a stupid question !
Cheers all.
Maybe some of these threads can help:
'Thread: Recognise Ogg Flac .oga files.'
(http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?71357-Recognise-Ogg-Flac-oga-files).
'Thread: Ogg files not playing Squeezebox Server v7.5.1 and Squeezebox'
AndrewFG wrote:
Ok. I will study your PM and get back to you.
I believe this is a WMP-12 / Shark issue and not a Whitebear issue...
I studied your log. it shows that WMP is talking to Whitebear, and send
many SOAP GetXyz() commands and one single Stop() command to the player.
All of these
http://tinewahl.com/images/eyfme.html?yua=at.sxdshammj=mkv.gddsnieid=faon___
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Ironically I do actually use home plugs between the 2 routers, but for
simplicity sake I called it an Ethernet connection. As both ends are
Ethernet in to the routers and their are no other home plugs on the
power network, so they should be invisible to the routers as I believe
home plugs run as
As a newbe to streaming Music I find it very cool to venture into a new
realm of music listening.
After being involved in Audio for many years this has rekindled my
interest in tweaking ,playing around with new toys.
When I started using computers 16 Meg storage was on a 16in. removable
platter
billybeek wrote:
As a newbe to streaming Music I find it very cool to venture into a new
realm of music listening.
After being involved in Audio for many years this has rekindled my
interest in tweaking ,playing around with new toys.
When I started using computers 16 Meg storage was on a
pski wrote:
I was cards. We didn't need no stinking disk drives! Oh: then the big
innovation was reading cards to the platter so it could be sorted by a
program instead of sorting through the sorter that did 120 cards per
minute.
This was a Univac 9200 II that only had buttons. Not a
billybeek wrote:
Yup when I studied Electronics the head of the school was a retied old
IBM Engineer one of the things we worked on was a IBM card reader,
He was great to talk to.
Sort is easy now: you click on a column heading and then on a button.
To sort a card, you picked a row number
drwho? wrote:
I have a classic that has worked faultlessly until Napster became
Rhapsody. Now it will not stream Rhapsody when connected wirelessly,
everything else works fine and even rhapsody works when it is connected
via ethernet. Any ideas.
just a guess but have to talked to rhapsody
pski wrote:
Sort is easy now: you click on a column heading and then on a button.
To sort a card, you picked a row number that were one per character.
Sort on the first or the second or so on..
All the cards went into the left top side of the machine and they went
into the lower pockets
billybeek wrote:
That is the unit we studied on.
Note that the number of bins is not 10 for 0-9)
Why would that be
pski's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=15574
View this thread:
I want to report back. Track gain was the way to go with Mp3Gain. It
took about 36 hours for 10,500 tracks, but now I don't have to change
the volume every few minutes.
Did I say that I now have 10500() tracks in my FREAKIN' CAR?
Thanks again for the help and sage advice.
If you have bridging enabled you will need to disable it to use
Rhapsody. Rhapsody is very tight on memory due to a recent security
increase, and bridging is now too much to run at the same time.
Otherwise you should be fine in wireless mode.
pski wrote:
Note that the number of bins is not 10 for 0-9)
Why would that be
I am retired 14 yrs studied many years ago.
billybeek's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=54815
View this thread:
I can remember going to see similar pcs of computer equipment when a
youngster. My father was a contract negotiater for Sperry Rand back
then. Units were the size of a stove or refrigerator. Punch cards,
Cobalt and Fortran. How far we have come, but it's nice to remember the
early pioneers.
dasmueller wrote:
I can remember going to see similar pcs of computer equipment when a
youngster. My father was a contract negotiater for Sperry Rand back
then. Units were the size of a stove or refrigerator. Punch cards,
Cobalt and Fortran. How far we have come, but it's nice to remember
Fahzz wrote:
I want to report back. Track gain was the way to go with Mp3Gain. It
took about 36 hours for 10,500 tracks, but now I don't have to change
the volume every few minutes.
Did I say that I now have 10500() tracks in my FREAKIN' CAR?
Thanks again for the help and sage advice.
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