In fact, rebooting the router and re-establishing the wireless connection was one of the first things I tried. I'll mess with the router, but I'm unclear what I'd change and what effect it might have on other wireless devices on my home network.
It's obviously not feasible for users to mess with routers at their workplace or public location.
I wonder what the difference between our devices is? My specific situation is:
I was one of the first purchasers of the Droid on release day. Theoretically, I would have an early physical version of the device. If there were any engineering changes from that manufacturing to when others bought their devices, that might account for the difference.
I also applied FRG01B to a stock, non-rooted phone. Perhaps others upgraded from a different circumstance?
I suppose it comes down to a buggy networking stack somewhere. Consequently, any individual device's reaction to the bug(s) may be unpredictable. There may be other apps installed that impact network connectivity in the background, etc.
If anyone's interested, I just
blogged about this, retracting yesterday's blog about how to install FRG01B.
Bill Stone