Tew had her first international appearance at the 2012 World Rowing Junior Championships in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. At the 2011 Maadi Cup at Lake Karapiro, she reached B-finals in all three of her boat classes. At the 2010 Maadi Cup at Lake Ruataniwha, she won a bronze medal in the girls U16 double sculls.
She attended her first Maadi Cup in 2009 at Lake Karapiro but did not get into any of the A-finals. Tew took up rowing in 2008 while at Queen Margaret College. She is studying towards a Bachelor of Business Studies at Massey University. She received her secondary education at Queen Margaret College. TP-Link is value for the money (only a couple of sheckles more than Trendnet stuff tends to be, but a vast gulf in reliability/performance).Born in Wellington, she is the daughter of New Zealand Rugby CEO Steve Tew. In my experience Trendnet products are simply cheap. I am not going to sing hosanas over my TP-Link switch, because it isn't "incredible", but it IS a good value for the money. The Trendnet switch had.no firmware updates ever). It has also had much better post launch support (up to I think 4 or 5 firmware updates over the last 2 years. My 1 year newer TP-Link semi-managed switch has a much better UI and significantly more features. It is circa 2011, but gives the feeling of something that was design circa 2004. It works and it works fine, but the UI of the admin page is at best cruddy and the features are very light for a semi-managed switch. The semi-managed Trendnet switch I have is at best meh. Netgear dumb switches are about the only 5/8 port dumb switchs I have ever seen die, which to me say manufacturing defect at one of their factories). That said, it is rather amazing that Netgear has managed to do such a thing (yes, I've seen some of their cheap 5/8 port switches die a horrible death.
Engenius tends to make inexpensive "prosumer" products that get okay performance, but they are less consumer oriented (both in pricing and feature set, but as mentioned, prosumer, so if you need some of that stuff, like POE support, or outdoor rated equipment, they are a great go to manufacturer if you aren't looking for super high performance or quality.and can't afford the price tag that goes with that).Ĭlick to expand.Just because a cheap product works fine, doesn't mean it isn't still a cheap product.Ī small dumb gigabit switch is pretty hard to mess up. TP-Link tends to make good quality products at fairly low prices, but tend to be missing some of the firmware/features of "the big two". Netgear and Asus generally make pretty quality ones, for a price. That said, DLink does seem to make halfway decent and cheap semi-managed switches, but I dislike their wireless products heavily. Them, Belkin and DLink I generally steer clear of. On the whole though I don't believe that Trendnet makes very good wireless products. It's an artificial market segmentation, forcing users to buy one device or the other.Īre you sure it isn't in repeater mode, and not in access point mode? Also distance to the thing? Obstructions? Got a read on what the actual signal strength is (in dBm)? Their equivalent router model to this AP, does have four LAN and one WAN gigabit port, but it does not support repeater or Client mode. Also disappointed that it only has a single gigabit ethernet port.
#TEW 2016 LICENSE MISSING DOWNLOAD#
I don't know if it's the same USB3.0 chipset, bridged to a gigabit ethernet port internally, or if it's a PCI-E version.īut given the cap on download speeds using this device, I'm guessing it's USB. Indicating, possibly, that this device has a RealTek 8812 chipset internally. Interestingly enough, I saw this in the TEW's log: Like, 10MB/sec max slow, connected to my unRAID server through my ESR1200 AP through my gigabit network. It does pass IPv6 in Client mode, which is an issue for Tomato routers. Once configured, though, in client mode, it works well. It requires being plugged into an existing router to obtain an IP address for itself, in order to be configured. With the driver-only package, it shows up under my USB hub as USB2.0 hub as its parent node, so I assume that it is running in USB2.0 mode.Īnyways, I recently picked up the TrendNet AP (which can be configured as AP + repeater, or Client mode).
#TEW 2016 LICENSE MISSING DRIVER#
The full driver package includes a "check and switch" utility, that I think switches the USB wifi from USB2.0 to 3.0, if it can, for greater speed. I think I've gotten 27MB/sec out of my other NAS, when I was running the full driver package. I can get 24MB/sec out of these, downloading from my unRAID server. I had been using PremierTek PT-8812AU USB3.0 RealTek 8812AU wifi adapters. I have an Engenius ESR1200 AC1200 AP that I am using on my gigabit LAN.