Not quite. The configuration (when you click save config), will get downloaded to your client device (like any other web download).So these configurations get saved to the data drives then ... ok
Now you are just confusing me .... what do you define as the "Client device" ... surely it can't be the boot media, otherwise how do you restore configuration when you create a new boot media device,Not quite. The configuration (when you click save config), will get downloaded to your client device (like any other web download).
Sorry about that. I mean this^^^. What you use to view the web management page.or are you referring to the machine I am using to view the web page on ...
The linux client was with wifi, the window client was hard wired .... I guess the file transfer is reported as 7Mbytes/sec which would line up with the network speed of 70Mbits per second ..Are you using Wi-Fi? If you have it hardwired it should easily be faster than that unless your hardware is bad or not up to the task
Try ifconfig and look at the interfaces. re0 - Realtek, em0 - Intel, bg0 - Broadcom
As I said, you can into problems trying to import NTFS. Sometimes running a chkdsk from Windows helps, other times not.
One thing you might try - give your Windows machine a static IP address on the same subnet your server is on and connect it directly to the server.
Hey Sweet, you keep missing the point, I have only a 100MBit network, and it is performing at 100Mbit, How do I go faster than the hardware? You have some majic trick or something?Are you using Wi-Fi? If you have it hardwired it should easily be faster than that unless your hardware is bad or not up to the task