• SNBForums Code of Conduct

    SNBForums is a community for everyone, no matter what their level of experience.

    Please be tolerant and patient of others, especially newcomers. We are all here to share and learn!

    The rules are simple: Be patient, be nice, be helpful or be gone!

Recent content by HackSlash

  1. HackSlash

    ASUS RT-BE92U

    I am having great success with this internal card upgrade. This way you can use existing laptop antennas. I generally avoid USB for permanent devices like this. I usually use PCI slot cards for desktops too...
  2. HackSlash

    ASUS RT-BE92U

    Yes, like I mentioned earlier: I was struggling to get good performance on 6ghz but I was using Linux kernel 6.11 and when I updated to 6.12 it began working really well. I also have a Win10 and a Win11 system where I had similar experience. The Win10 system currently operates faster on 5ghz...
  3. HackSlash

    ASUS RT-BE92U

    I'm running MLO just fine. I'm not experiencing any issues like you described right now. So it's possible. If you're not able to get stable after factory reset and careful config building then you might want to reach out to ASUS. Get that warranty support. If it's fixable with software...
  4. HackSlash

    ASUS RT-BE92U

    This router is very picky. Many combinations of settings will cause the 6ghz band to run around 30-70Mbps. I had to factory reset, create my IOT and Guest networks again. Then the primary SSID began working a bit better. Enabling MLO currently allows the best performance for me. Big note: You...
  5. HackSlash

    Multiple Ethernet Driver Frame Padding Information Disclosure (Etherleak)

    Asus RT-AC68U, scanned from the inside
  6. HackSlash

    Multiple Ethernet Driver Frame Padding Information Disclosure (Etherleak)

    I ran Nessus against my Asus Router Running Merlin version 384.18 (28-June-2020) Good news! No major Vulnerabilities. Just this one marked Low. It's an old bug disclosed back in 2003. Might be a false positive but the output did show that ICMP packets are padded with random data instead of...
Back
Top