It's been almost three weeks since I bought the router. Bought at a rate of 500 Mbps for Beeline's use. Beeline has an easy-to-use website that allows anyone to sign up. During the first five days, everything went smoothly, and my speed at 5 GHz was just around 450 megabits. A steady 2GHz signal can be heard in all three rooms of a three-room apartment. The online dumping started on day six. Without explanation or discernible pattern. After 5 minutes, or even 5 hours, it can fall off. Sometimes it came back on its own, and other times the router had to be reset. In addition, both WiFi and traditional PC-based Internet access were lost (connected via a router by wire). When a wan beeline is directly connected to a computer, connectivity is reliable, and it has functioned for days without any interruptions. More over an hour of pinging resulted in no data loss. I flashed it, adjusted the settings, searched w3bsit3-dns. Com and the official tplink forum for help, and finally gave up. I checked in with beeline technical support and learned that, as was to be expected, the line was functioning normally. In a wired Computer environment, the Internet is reliable. It dawned on me that I'm not the only one having issues with beeline and tplink. Although many people are affected by the Internet's decline, someone ultimately prevails. I was unsuccessful. That's too bad. I solved the problem by setting it up as a router for Rostelecom (I use two different providers) and it has been running smoothly for days without crashing once. Infer what you will. If I had realized that a tambourine might be used in such dances, I probably wouldn't have gotten one for Beeline. Maybe it's Rostelecom's PPPoE or the L2TP bee's fault, but I'm just a regular consumer who wants the product to function out of the box, and I'm not an expert to delve into all this jungle.
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