>>
>> Do note that I thought I read that tomato was no longer under development.
>
>
> the original tomato is not, but it works very well. The original tomato
> only runs on old school broadcom based WRT54's, not anything newer.
>
> there are a few forks, notably "Shibby" and "Toastman" that are
On 10/7/2014 11:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Tom Bishop wrote:
>>
>>As another suggestion, you could try installing the Tomato firmware
>>rather than dd-wrt. I used to run dd-wrt (on a v1.2 WRT-54GS) and had
>>similar stability issues; I've personally found Tomato
>>(http://www.polarcloud.com
Tom Bishop wrote:
>>
>> As another suggestion, you could try installing the Tomato firmware
>> rather than dd-wrt. I used to run dd-wrt (on a v1.2 WRT-54GS) and had
>> similar stability issues; I've personally found Tomato
>> (http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato) to be more stable.
>
> +1 on tomato v
On 10/07/2014 01:40 PM Tom Bishop wrote:
As another suggestion, you could try installing the Tomato firmware
rather than dd-wrt. I used to run dd-wrt (on a v1.2 WRT-54GS) and had
similar stability issues; I've personally found Tomato
(http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato) to be more stable.
- --
>
> As another suggestion, you could try installing the Tomato firmware
> rather than dd-wrt. I used to run dd-wrt (on a v1.2 WRT-54GS) and had
> similar stability issues; I've personally found Tomato
> (http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato) to be more stable.
>
>
> - --
> Nels Lindquist
>
>
+1 on t
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On 9/19/2014 6:38 AM, ken wrote:
> On 09/19/2014 06:37 AM Timothy Murphy wrote:
> From what I've read on the dd-wrt forums, some of its
> distributions contain code which is vulnerable to heartbleed, so
> you might want to check the version installed
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