OpenWrt is often ideal for older or cheaper modems to provide lots of extra, and up to date, features and security patches – Check when you buy, that a modem is OpenWrt compatible

It’s a fact of life that most proprietary vendors only support their hardware for a few years with updates. Another practice is selling their cheaper modems with a lot of functionality missing, to encourage buyers to pay up for a more expensive model to for example get mesh networking, load balancing, real-time network monitoring stats, etc.

So it’s worth always checking, when buying a new modem, if it is OpenWrt compatible, as this will allow you to reflash the modem with OpenWrt. It could also mean buying a cheaper modem now, and gaining some extra functionality at no extra cost. But most important is that you can continue to get software updates and security patches.

See OpenWrt – Wikipedia

#technology #opensource #modems #OpenWrt #LEDE

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OpenWrt (from open wireless router) is an open-source project for embedded operating systems based on Linux, primarily used on embedded devices to route network traffic. The main components are Linux, util-linux, musl,[4] and BusyBox. All components have been optimized to be small enough to fit into the limited storage and memory available in home…