My ISP claims that its service disruption is limited to a couple of events between December, 2022 and January, 2023. My experience of problems with internet connections is far more frequent than that.
The event log available on the modem’s web page is overwriting more recent events, but there is a persistent error that repeats, in conjunction with other error(4) messages:
"SW upgrade Failed after download - Incompatible SW file" |
When this happens, my internet connection is lost, and often my Arris Mesh network becomes unavailable as well. I’ve talked to my ISP technical representatives about this. They have no interest at all in helping figure what might be going on between the modem and the local whole house wifi. So much for the event log being important to the ISP. That might be true if the ISP is supporting this model of modem and renting it out.
Question 1: If I interpret this event as one where Arris attempted to upgrade the modem software, but the upgrade failed, why would this be a cause for disruption of service?
Question 2: If Arris is attempting to upgrade the modem software, why not provide the notice in advance, and give the user some control over when to allow it, so the user can monitor this? That would arm the user with more information to feed back to solve the problem. I have seen this error complaint in other threads and haven’t been impressed with the technical response.
Question 3: Where can I find a description of the errors that might show up in my modem event log? Why can’t I find a technical response that explains the meaning of the event errors? Even if the root cause of the error can be multiple and indeterminate, at least the designers of the modem software and hardware know what local conditions would cause the message.
This is a recurring (daily) problem for me. I work from home and have to VPN in to my company for some applications to work. If the internet service is getting disrupted frequently, I’m wasting a lot of time rebooting modems and my computer to hopefully reconnect, when I should be working on what my company relies on me to do.