Linksys Media Extenders Won’t Boot Up – Is Cisco To Blame?

Logitech has all but given up on the plain vanilla set-top box war in favor of Google TV powered devices, but owners of the previous generation DMA2100 and DMA2200 Media Center Extenders woke up to a nasty surprise yesterday, their devices had been bricked. According to hundreds of upset forum posters over at The Green Button, the cause can be traced back to a dial home protocol built into the boxes firmware that now points to an address which no longer exists. Speculation up to this point is suggesting that Cisco may have pulled the plug on the server in question, but if this were true it would be a bitter pill to swallow since the oldest of these devices only went on sale last summer.
If you are unfortunate enough to be fighting with one of these boxes yourself, you might want to stop by The Green Button forums where some users have crafted some interesting work-a round’s such has blocking the dial home function via your router, or simply pointing it to an invalid gateway. Of course this could all just be a massive misunderstanding to a simple server crash, but Cisco’s silence on the issue leads us to believe it is something slightly more sinister.
We would like to take the opportunity to remind the victims of this tragedy that had they built a trusty home theater PC they wouldn’t be in this boat at all, and yes, we have a how-to for that.
Comments
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TechLarry
November 08, 2010 at 12:04pm
You know there is a class action suit on the way. There has to be. We just can't let companies get away with this kind of bovine-excrement.
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Keith E. Whisman
November 07, 2010 at 8:50am
Mr Shatner told me that he had a very bad case of hemroids and he was extremely constipated when that picture of him was taken while on the commode.
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Eoraptor
November 06, 2010 at 9:04am
Cause this one eneds to be taken with a grain of salt. Do I believe Cisco or Logitech would want to phase out an apparently dead-end technology? Sure.
Do I beleive that either of them would wilfully brick thousands of devices, especially relatively new ones without warning; or more importantly, a well marketed upsell to a newer profitable product? not for a minute.
More likely someone shut off the wrong server or pathway and no one realizes exactly which it is yet.
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