🇨🇦Samuel Proulx🇨🇦<p><span>The app for the TP-Link Deco mesh system is nice and </span><a href="https://fed.interfree.ca/tags/screenreader" rel="nofollow noopener" class="hashtag" target="_blank">#screenreader</a><span> </span><a href="https://fed.interfree.ca/tags/accessible" rel="nofollow noopener" class="hashtag" target="_blank">#accessible</a><span> if you're in the market for a router. More than can be said for Linksys Velop. Amplifi was okay, but the TP-Link app is actually better, at least on </span><a href="https://fed.interfree.ca/tags/IOS" rel="nofollow noopener" class="hashtag" target="_blank">#IOS</a><span> with </span><a href="https://fed.interfree.ca/tags/voiceover" rel="nofollow noopener" class="hashtag" target="_blank">#voiceover</a><span>. I haven't had the system for long enough to give a review, other than that setup was quick and all the apps joined without issue. Also the default DHCP settings are weird. Who wants to start at 192.168.68.1? Changing it isn't obvious. First you have to change the lan address. Then it will change the gateway for you as part of that. Only then can you change the DHCP allocation. And even then it wants to start allocating at 192.168.0.1. That's too weird for me when the router lives at 192.168.1.1. And even after fiddling, it's still randomly assigning devices in 192.168.2.</span><i><span> and 192.168.3.</span></i><span>. But at least it let me reserve the devices that I need to be static. I probably have to go somewhere and do something incomprehensible with netmasks, but whatever. It's fine. </span><a href="https://fed.interfree.ca/tags/a11y" rel="nofollow noopener" class="hashtag" target="_blank">#a11y</a></p>