![]() The header of the article is: Add-on “TwonkyMedia Server v.7.3-RC4” for D-Link NAS. The Downloaded File comes whiteout extenon such as ZIP or TAR and e.g. On the other hand I have found a (living) download link for 320L NAS but unfortunately there is no description how to install this piece of soft on the NAS. No chance to precheck the available versions. Unfortunately the only possibility is pay and then follow the download link provided. The official Twonky Store is offering a LINUX Version but I don’t know if there is an Arm Version available. But all the links to download a TWONKY 7.X are broken.īuying a license is not the problem, but what would I get? I really crawled through many “HOTO´s” on sites like NAS-Tweek and related. The 1200AC by itself is more than appealing enough.My configuration: NAS 320L, Current NAS Firmware Version 1.03,Firmware Date, “”fun_plug” is running.ĭoes anyone actually find a method to install the newest version of I liked the app that remotely configures the router from a smartphone, but no new apps have been added since the 1900AC’s release, so this seems unlikely to be a major selling point. The same apps are available for the 1200AC. When the 1900AC debuted, Linksys touted (among other features) the apps available for managing the router - that is, a way for parents to enforce website restrictions. Flashing the router with OpenWRT was easy enough, although you’ll want to download and keep handy a copy of the original Linksys firmware in case you find OpenWRT’s array of options too dizzying. It was revised early in April 2015 to fix several problems, and now the 1200AC and 1900AC alike have OpenWRT images available. The required driver finally came out last December. Unfortunately, the 1900AC couldn’t do that when first released, due to the lack of a proper open source driver for the Marvell 88W8864 chip set in the router. One of the original selling points of the 1900AC, and now the 1200AC, was that it could accept open firmware such as OpenWRT. The Web interface for file sharing (by way of the Twonky server) isn’t terribly polished, but it gets the job done. Connect a storage device to the USB or SATA ports, and you can share the contents via a password-controlled folder access, FTP services, or a DLNA-compatible media server. The rest of the hardware in the 1200AC is identical to its predecessor: four gigabit Ethernet ports, a USB 2/3 port, and a SATA port. Signal strength on both 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks are more or less the same as those put out by the 1900AC. Even more surprising was that the 1200AC’s wireless was as good as its bigger brother’s, despite having fewer antennas. ![]() Tests with the iPerf network performance test tool, between two systems with wired 1GB Ethernet adapters, showed that the 1200AC provides no less throughput than the 1900AC did (at least in wired mode). ![]() For Wireless Protected Setup (WPS), there’s a small button on the back of the unit - small enough that I missed it the first time I looked, so be sure you find it ahead of time if you use WPS. No further tinkering was needed to replace my existing router with the 1200AC by providing the same wireless network name and password used before, all my devices connected without issue. The few options that need to be configured out of the box such as the wireless network name are all provided through a wizard interface. Plug in, wire up, turn on, and navigate to. ![]() The 1200AC uses the same Smart Wi-Fi-branded firmware as the 1900AC, so setting up and configuring the router for use was about as painless as could be. Be warned, the wart is slightly too large to use on a wall socket without blocking both outlets I ended up plugging it into a power strip. I'm less fond of another change: The corded power brick on the 1900AC has been replaced by a wall-wart plug on the 1200AC. Said antennas, again as with the 1900AC, are removable and can be upgraded if needed - for example, with directional antennas. Though the 1200AC has only two antennas versus the 1900AC’s four, the wireless signal strength on the 1200AC was about as good as that of its bigger brother.
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