so im setting up the network in my house, and now i need a routerall the stores are saying N is much better than Gis it worth what you pay extra?
1/29/2009 7:44:46 AM
depends.what are you gonna be doing with it on a daily basis?if just browsing the internet then both are overkill.
1/29/2009 7:54:52 AM
5 computers - internet and downloading shitthat and everyone using the same printer
1/29/2009 8:29:55 AM
it isn't going to matter then. internet bandwidth is the limiting factor here, not the router.
1/29/2009 8:32:11 AM
can't be that much extra to get N, what's the price difference on the routers you are considering?
1/29/2009 8:35:02 AM
On the same topic, can someone recommend a good N router that can run Tomato or dd-wrt? I'm still using my really old WRT54Gv2 with Tomato, and while I love it, transferring files is painfully slow (about 1MB/s average from a wireless MacBookPro to a wired desktop PC).]
1/29/2009 8:36:31 AM
^ i was going to ask a similar question...though i figure that if i'm buying a new router, might as well get gigabit, too and tomato FTW...my buffalo is doing quite well (wireless transfers are around 4-5mbps and hardwired are 9-10mbps, so there's no big hurry)
1/29/2009 8:57:58 AM
if you're doing networking between computers - get Notherwise, go with G if it's more than $25 cheaper
1/29/2009 10:36:41 AM
what is this tomato you speak of?
1/29/2009 11:20:43 AM
In my apartment there are a ton of G networks, and I'm assuming other things that share the 2.4GHz band, so my speeds were always bad. I went and found a router that could do a 5GHz N network and a 2.4GHz G network at the same time, they call them different things but I think netgear calls them dualband. The plus is that on the N network, I can stream HD and do file transfers without it being piss poor slow, and there is still a seperate G network for my ancient laptops and whatever else anyone brings over. Be aware if you buy an N router that works on 2.4Ghz, whenever you connect a G device to it, when that device is active everytihng on the network is bumped to G speed. But if your just using it for internet and a printer it doesn't matter.
1/29/2009 11:25:25 AM
unless you're file sharing within your network, it won't make any difference.
1/29/2009 11:36:34 AM
1/29/2009 12:56:30 PM
Go with n, it's backward compatable with it's predecessors.
1/29/2009 12:57:11 PM
why is N going to be official? it's been draft for years now, hasn't it?
1/29/2009 3:10:28 PM
Its been draft for years, but certified draft N equipment will work with "official" N stuff whenever the standard is finalized. According to every WFA certification test plan I've seen.
1/29/2009 4:43:00 PM
1/30/2009 12:13:48 AM
There are a HELL of a lot more benefits to using N than that.N is the way to go, period.
1/30/2009 12:37:00 AM
IIRC, the linksys WRT310N runs DD-WRT and is gigabit and wireless-nyou can also get it for $80 shipped every couple of weeks (though right now it's $90 shipped):http://www.buy.com/prod/linksys-wrt310n-wireless-n-gigabit-router-linksys-wrt310n-wireless-n/q/loc/101/206462229.html
1/30/2009 9:28:13 AM
true... I should have mentioned the range issues, I was only thinking about speed when I posted earlier. sorry sorry.
1/30/2009 10:24:23 AM