She downloaded the only legitimate copy – a .bin file ~3–5 MB. She logged into router admin (usually 192.168.1.1 ), navigated to System Tools → Firmware Upgrade , selected the file, and clicked Upgrade . The progress bar crept… then completed. Router rebooted.
Before downloading, she verified:
After downloading, scan the file with Windows Defender or VirusTotal. If any engine flags it as malicious, do not install – the file may be fake.
Direct downloads for are currently difficult to find , as the manufacturer (iBall) has removed many legacy firmware files from its official website.
She downloaded the only legitimate copy – a .bin file ~3–5 MB. She logged into router admin (usually 192.168.1.1 ), navigated to System Tools → Firmware Upgrade , selected the file, and clicked Upgrade . The progress bar crept… then completed. Router rebooted.
Before downloading, she verified:
After downloading, scan the file with Windows Defender or VirusTotal. If any engine flags it as malicious, do not install – the file may be fake.
Direct downloads for are currently difficult to find , as the manufacturer (iBall) has removed many legacy firmware files from its official website.