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SteveD_DC's avatar
Feb 12, 2022
Solved

Has Netgear abandoned the R6300v2? Where is the list of obsoleted products?

We are coming up on one year since the R6300v2 has gotten a firmware update (v1.0.4.52 was released on 2021-02-18).  I'm tracking a half-dozen other Netgear devices, and every one of those has gotten several firmware updates since that time (the next-oldest one got updated in September 2021).  A year without updates during a year where a lot of vulnerabilities in these products have been rectified tells me that Netgear has abandoned this model.  The Support page gives no hint either way.  Is the R6300v2 still a supported product?

 

Does Netgear publish a list of either currently-supported products or a list of obsoleted products?  If this device isnt' going to get firmware support (in the form of fixes for security vulnerabilities) then I'm going to retire it.  If Netgear can't be clear about what is supported or not, I'm going to consider other suppliers for its replacement.

 

I did contact Support, just wrapped up a lengthy chat with someone who just wanted to tell me about how Armor scans my network for bad stuff.  Wonderful -- and not helpful.

 

Can anyone answer the boldface questions?

 

Thank you.

 

 


  • SteveD_DC wrote:

    Really unfortunate that Netgear isn't upfront about what products are supported and which aren't.  Makes me rethink my next purchase.

     

    It certainly would be useful to have that sort of list. Which is probably why Netgear does indeed publish such a list:

     

    NETGEAR End of Service | NETGEAR

     

    It would take some analysis to work out how old something is before it becomes obsolete.

     

    In the case of Netgear, devices may well enter what it flags as "end of life" or EOL.

     

    There my still be updates for security things after it disappears from the retail chain. In general the flow of updates slows down after the initial release. That is when bugs turn up and when things get new features.

     

    In the case of the R6300v2, we are talking about an inexpensive bottom-of-the-range router that came out in 2013 based on an original release from 2012. So, it is now near on a decade old. (I wonder how Apple responds to queries about a decade old iPhone.)

8 Replies

  • there isn't a list of obsolete/EOL products. 

    You could always check into running ddwrt on it. Might give it some more life/features. 

    • SteveD_DC's avatar
      SteveD_DC
      Guide

      Really unfortunate that Netgear isn't upfront about what products are supported and which aren't.  Makes me rethink my next purchase.

       

      Excellent suggestion regarding DD-WRT.  The database at dd-wrt.com lists the R7000 and R7000P, but not the R7000v2 as supported, so it may not work.

       

      Thank you for the recommendation.


      • SteveD_DC wrote:

        Really unfortunate that Netgear isn't upfront about what products are supported and which aren't.  Makes me rethink my next purchase.

         

        It certainly would be useful to have that sort of list. Which is probably why Netgear does indeed publish such a list:

         

        NETGEAR End of Service | NETGEAR

         

        It would take some analysis to work out how old something is before it becomes obsolete.

         

        In the case of Netgear, devices may well enter what it flags as "end of life" or EOL.

         

        There my still be updates for security things after it disappears from the retail chain. In general the flow of updates slows down after the initial release. That is when bugs turn up and when things get new features.

         

        In the case of the R6300v2, we are talking about an inexpensive bottom-of-the-range router that came out in 2013 based on an original release from 2012. So, it is now near on a decade old. (I wonder how Apple responds to queries about a decade old iPhone.)