Hi,
Thanks for your response.
I don't see any hardware version. The firmware is 1.03. It's the latest firmware version on the dlink site.
It may be that all DLink devices "re-index upon a power cycle or reboot," but this is a mobile device, and that in and of itself makes its DLNA feature useless.
Think about it, if the power goes out in my house in the middle of the night or while I'm at work, and my home router has to reboot, and re-index, then more than likely by the time I wake up or get home, the re-indexing will have taken place and I'm good to go. Generally, no problem.
But if I turn the device on when I start my car, and want to listen to music on the way to work, how am I going to be able to do that if the existing index is tossed out, and it begins from scratch re-indexing. Right now it's indexing pretty slowing, but no matter how fast they get the indexing to work, it's not going to get through my entire collection in a few minutes. As it is currently indexing, it might take, let's say, 3 hours. But even if they reduce it to 30 minutes, I'm still at work before all of my content is available to me.
If this is normal behavior, then I say that Dlink hasn't taken a couple of minutes to think through the implications.
You may have misunderstood my comment about the index being in memory. That's not a problem, it's a benefit. Since the index exists on the hard drive, the media can be immediately accessible when the device is powered on or the media is plugged in. All that needs to happen is to remove the logic that has it do a full re-index every time, and have it run either when there's no index found, or when initiated manually via the control panel.
One additional option that would make the device even better, would be an option to keep the existing index and look for new or changed media. That would allow a user to stream content while the server synchronizes the existing index with the files that are present. That's how my Logitech Media Server works, as well as most other DLNA software I've used over the years.
In this case, though, because it's a mobile device, it really is all the difference. DLink should remove the DLNA feature if they're not going to make it usable, and that's the message I'll be spreading around if I've wasted $100 on this device.
It's a shame, really, because I really like this device. It does most things well. The interface is functional and relatively well designed. But this DLNA limitation brings it from a 5 to a 1 for me.
I will be contacting my regional DLink support office if I don't get anything resolved here, and I thank you again for your response.