

Or, if you have any other suggestions.thanks.

With the MAC address of the OC200 this should be possible. So, I am kind of thinking TP-Link should really check what is going on at the server side, and why my OC200 gets disconnected. So the OC200 is alive, always on, connected the the LAN, the LAN is connected to the WAN, but the OC200 is not on the cloud. if the scope is about testing internet connection during cloud access off, well, this is already proved by the remote access I have described above Anyway, no other devices in the network disconnect, and the WiFi network inside the premises provided by the EAPS continue to work flawlessly.Īnyway, just to be double sure, from the CLI interface of the router I have pinged the OC200 while monitoring its could access status from the app and the web interface.: the ping goes on with no interruptions regardless of the cloud access status.

Not sure about the test to connect the laptop to the second port of the OC200. When I was on the site to observe the problem, the cloud led of the OC200 turns on and off according to the status of the cloud access I can see on the web interface. It means that the OC200 stays connected to the router (which in turn is continuously connected to the Internet, otherwise I would lose access to it from remote).
#VIGI LIMITED CLOUD BABY MONITOR OFFLINE#
What I notice, is that I can see when the OC200 goes offline and online, from the cloud access control. I have access to the OC200 as I was there, using the OC200 web interface. At the moment I am not at the site, but I can tell you that I am able to access the OC200 with no interruptions from the remote access of the router.
