Spammay, Duane there gave you some good info. Best not ignore it.
First, if you read the test reports and the cover letters for equipment
approval, it's amazing that anything works at all.
Second... Devices are running hotter, faster and being pushed to the
limit. (Sometimes with pretty junky parts. No names mentioned. <G>) This
makes them way more susceptible to power fluctuations. Different
countries, states and sometimes different counties have different rules
for what's acceptable. Some states have no rules at all and leave it up
to the power companies to decide. If you can see your lights in your
office, or home dimming, that's not a good thing for computers and
computer peripherals period. Since appliances are now using computer
chips in them, they're affected as well. You also want to consider if
your network goes down and you have a battery backup for the computers,
if the routers and gateways aren't protected, then you have a good
chance of losing information because the link to data was lost.
(Printers are plugged into a battery backup is *generally* a bad thing
and voids one, or both warranties.)
So for a good UPS, I recommend Triplite.
http://www.tripplite.com They
make them with 'line massagers', that supplements very small loses in
power, protects against surges and of course the battery part. Not all
models are made with line massaging. There are other manufacturers who
make these as well. For about $105 bucks you can protect countless hours
of work and the cost of your hardware generally. It can protect your
equipment / bios from actual damage, like what you're describing with
the reboot and loss of firmware settings. I like to talk to their
engineers before purchasing, so they can recommend the model to cover
each specific workstation / server. It's free and they're real good at
what they do. The battery software will even sense a blackout, close
your applications and shut down the computer properly for you while your
away.
Spammay Blockay wrote:
>In article <Xns946DCB6921B8notmwnotmecom@63.240.76.16>,
>Duane Arnold <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
>
>>(E-Mail Removed) (Spammay Blockay) wrote in news:btqqga
>>And like I am saying, I had some issues with my BEFW11S4 v1 router when I
>>first purchased it. That all went away when I got that UPS and plugged
>>the router into it. The router has been going strong now approaching
>>three years in May 2004 without a peep out of it. If you go into any
>>computer room in the business environment where these devices are being
>>used, they are most likely connected to a UPS. They don't like spikes,
>>brownouts, blackouts or a sudden lost of power. And they will start going
>>defective if the situation is continuous.
>>
>>
>
>Ah well, I had the impression that, these being consumer-grade devices,
>they'd be less susceptible to power fluctuations (given the assumption
>that the average home user won't go out and buy a UPS).
>
>I'll see if I can get an answer back from LinkSys (Ha!) before I think
>about that option. Thanks for your suggestions!
>
>
>