Oh my, I similtaniously posted with you, snowhog.
Here's how it goes: my family uses Earthlink as the internet provider. When they signed up, this router I spoke of was given to them, as well as instructions to configure it. They followed all instructions, and all was well. All my family used windows or a mac, and it was I who introduced linux to the household. Apparently, at the start, I complained about the problem, but they reluctantly pushed me away, saying "the problem isn't the internet connection - It's perfectly fine" and they also refused to see the router configuration, scared that I might blow it up, or anger the internet provider. No trust at all... Windows/Mac, plus the router just works for them (although I'm slowly understanding their troubles with windows)
Like I said, using fedora bypasses the problem - but it's not good in other areas, such as its weak repository, problems with using NVIDIA drivers, and other things. In this way, it made me think my problem occurs elsewhere.
Here's how it goes: my family uses Earthlink as the internet provider. When they signed up, this router I spoke of was given to them, as well as instructions to configure it. They followed all instructions, and all was well. All my family used windows or a mac, and it was I who introduced linux to the household. Apparently, at the start, I complained about the problem, but they reluctantly pushed me away, saying "the problem isn't the internet connection - It's perfectly fine" and they also refused to see the router configuration, scared that I might blow it up, or anger the internet provider. No trust at all... Windows/Mac, plus the router just works for them (although I'm slowly understanding their troubles with windows)
Like I said, using fedora bypasses the problem - but it's not good in other areas, such as its weak repository, problems with using NVIDIA drivers, and other things. In this way, it made me think my problem occurs elsewhere.
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