Yes, I have updated firmware to 1.31 on the DAP and the DIR-815 only has the 1.00 firmware available so I was unable to upgrade. I have been just accepting my fate of using the 2.4ghz band on wireless G which works fairly well, although I can tell that I'm getting interference (most likely from the cordless phone of the lady who lives below me) because while I'm playing online games I will occasionally get "lost network connection" flashing up on the screen intermittently. This is usually not enough to make me lose my connection to the server and also only happens for a split second at a time but is enough to interrupt my experience. I am gaming on a ps3, for reference. Because of this nuisance I once again tried to get the 5ghz band working. I should note the only way I was even able to get the 2.4ghz band working was to set my wireless network to output b/g only, as soon as I do n only or b/g/n I get the problem of my DAP showing me as being connected but after a couple minutes I lose actual internet capability, although I may still be connected to the wireless network, I am unable to sign in to playstation network or use internet on my pc. After a few minutes of non-connectivity, it will magically work again for a few minutes. This seems to cycle indefinitely. I tried getting the 5ghz band to work, and it does work for a bit but exhibits the same symptoms. This leads me to believe that any time the router is broadcasting in wireless n I have this unstability. I was able to get the 5ghz working in ONLY wireless a, and on this mode it works consistently. It seems to work fine, and the throughput is good enough for me because I am not transferring large files over my wireless network, simply gaming and browsing so as long as my wireless network can provide the 15mbps of my cable internet then that should be enough. However, it does irk me that I paid all this money for wireless n equipment and am stuck using wireless a. I also can't help but wonder if my connection would be better on wireless n instead of wireless a, as far as gaming. Using wireless a has solved the intermittent "lost connection" problem in my online gaming, but every time that I get killed by a guy who seemingly is playing 2-3 seconds in the future from me, I wonder if my archaic wireless standard (802.11a) is to blame. What a nuisance.