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Looking For A Good Wireless G Router
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Thread : Looking For A Good Wireless G Router
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Although Toms has charts for routers that quickly display the newest and fastest routers, I really don't need any of them. I don't need MIMO, as none of the 6 computers on the network have a wireless card that can take advantage of that. I don't need wireless N as that is just plain flawed. I just need a good standard wireless g router and I cannot find any recommendations on Toms for such a router (it would be nice if it could handle a good amount of simultaneous connections and nicely share thoroughput too!).
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Now that you've narrowed it down to just about every wireless G router ever made (snicker), and since you don't need any special features, why don't you read some reviews on the WRT54G to see if you like it? |
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You're a funny guy. If you want I can make this a simpler question. What is the best of the plane jane wireless g routers? |
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The WRT54G is a good plain jane router, but realistically any of the name brand routers should do you just fine. I'd stay away from the off brand routers, but honestly since you don't really have any "special" needs, I'd base my decision on brand preference and the quality of the support and warranty that comes with the router. |
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That's what I though, I have a WRT54G v5 here and it plain sucks compated to my much older WRT54G that I have at home. Will definately check out the GL. |
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I'm not too sure what they changed through the various revisions, maybe if you could define "sucks", hehe. If you want to get advanced and void your warranty there's a linux project that has alternate firmware you can load on certain variants of the WRT54G to enable more functionality. |
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Sucks = drops wireless connection once in awhile (got better after firmware update but still did it on occasion) |
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Weird. I have a Netgear WGR614v6 (I think?), but I'm only using it as a switch/access point. I never really have any problems with it and it was dirt cheap, can't go wrong with dirt cheap... |
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Yeah the WRT54G is pretty good. Although if I were you, stay away from Linksys, I know many would disagree with me, but i have had so many problems with all of my 802.11b equipment it is not even funny at this point. Stated on the website with my product is that it has bugs that can't be fixed and I get horrible speeds when my friend uses Netgear and definately outperforms with the same ISP and connection speed. Our rooms are almost the same distance apart from the router. Just from a past experience I would go with Netgear and not Linksys. |
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I'm in a similar situation, as I'm also buying a router. I'm looking to connect 3 computers (2 WinXP and one OSX) with a router to form a home network and to share a cable connection. None of the current computers would need wireless connections at the moment but they all have wireless cards which I think are equipped for 802.11g. But I'd be connecting them with ethernet cards. In a few months I'll be getting a Linux/Solaris computer (haven't decided yet on the operating system), which I'll also connect to the LAN, with ethernet. Although I've never worked with a network before I'd like to share 2 printers with the other computers on the network if possible.
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Well you are in luck because the wireless network I talked about has all of these, including a nintendo DS haha. The WRT54GL is a decent router, not the best, and considering the state of home routers today I can't complain that much. Make sure you get the L, as in WRT54GL, if you get the linksys. I have 6 computers and the DS on wireless, just for your information. The only quirk I found with OS X is that you needed to specify the type of WEP (I'm using WEP, I know it sucks, but I'm in a residential area so it's no big deal).
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after installing quite a few routers, I have found Netgear to be the easiest to work with. I have had several problems with Linksys being incompatible with hardware that other routers are not incompatible with. DLink's software is not as intuitive or easy to work with as Netgear. Netgear is a breeze to set up and the software and settings are intuitive and easy to figure out. Linksys routers will only sit horizontally, while Netgear routers will stand vertically and are not as bulky as Linksys. This is quite handy when there is limited space to work with. |
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A couple of general comments.
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Let me correct myself about where I live. I go to Purdue and my neighbors are all definately not teenagers. They are parents with small children. |
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Whatever trips your trigger... trust your neighbors, fine with me. However, if your equipment supports WPA and you use WEP anyway... well, its up to you, but foolish, IMO. |
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Looking For A Good Wireless G Router
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