Reviewed on May 16, 2003If you need a way to connect your 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g adapters with Ethernet, the Linksys WRT55AG is the best solution to date.TAGS:router, WEP, SSID, WPA, IP address, Ethernet, IP, CD, security
Reviewed on July 24, 2008The TP-Link TL-WR941ND Wireless N router is a simple wireless N router with a friendly price. If all you require is a basic network and you have a mix of 802.11N and b/g clients, it does the job for cheap.TAGS:router, wireless router, D-Link Systems, Linksys, WPA, client, LAN, port, design, Wi-Fi, USB
Reviewed on July 20, 2006Though inconsistent, the D-Link N 650 router performed admirably overall compared to its Draft N competition. Still, we are unimpressed with how it measures up to the promise of 802.11n. Pass on this for now; in fact, pass on all Draft N routers until the spec is finalized.TAGS:D-Link Systems, router, IEEE 802.11n, SSID, spec, WEP, WPA, adapter, Belkin Corp., broadcasting, firmware, CD
Reviewed on March 15, 2006If your priorities don't include long-range connectivity, then by all means get the somewhat ironically named Netgear WPNT511 RangeMax 240 wireless notebook adapter for its record-breaking short-range speeds.TAGS:Netgear, Belkin Corp., D-Link Systems, adapter, PC Card, MIMO, WPA, router, card, setup, PC