![]() As router has less and less RAM available, it becomes slower and slower and in the end you have to reboot it. When a connection is closed, that RAM should be freed up. Basically whenever router needs to have lots of connections open, it uses up its RAM, which is normal. I'd say that the problem is bad memory management in router firmware. I know this isn't an answer - which is why I'm not posting it as an answer - but it is how I resolved the situation, and hopefully it'll be helpful for someone. Perhaps more importantly, my memory use is fairly constant. What could be causing these slowdowns, and how can I get rid of them?Īfter asking this followup question, I installed dd-wrt on my router, and I seem to be getting higher and more consistent speeds. The only thing I came across while searching for answers/dupes was this unresolved question, which seems similar superficially, but probably doesn't have the same root issue. Most of the time, it deals with just two standard Windows 7 laptops. The router is a Cisco/Linksys WRT160N v3 that's about a year old. If it makes a difference, my girlfriend and I both transfer large amounts of data fairly routinely for school (videoconferencing, downloading entire recorded lectures). Nothing else seems to work, though I'm sure there are options I haven't tried. Unlike before, all I have to do to fix it is open the router administration page and press the "Reboot" button. But every few days since then, my Internet has slowed down again. The problem went away after I updated to the latest firmware, so I didn't follow up too carefully. So I asked this question about how to make it faster. I waited a few days hoping it would go away on its own, but it didn't get better. ![]() A few weeks ago, I noticed that my Internet connection had slowed down to a crawl. ![]()
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