Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Linksys N300: Wi-Fi Wireless Router Linksys Connect, Parental Controls, Home Internet, Wireless Devices up to 300 Mbps Transfer Speed (Black)
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Linksys N300: Wi-Fi Wireless Router Linksys Connect, Parental Controls, Home Internet, Wireless Devices up to 300 Mbps Transfer Speed (Black)

Linksys N300: Wi-Fi Wireless Router Linksys Connect, Parental Controls, Home Internet, Wireless Devices up to 300 Mbps Transfer Speed (Black)

byLinksys
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Wavey Davey
5.0 out of 5 starsEASY Set-Up, Connected 12 PC's and Macs in 7 Minutes, PURRRFECT Dual-Band Router!
Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2010
The ease of setup of the Cisco-Linksys E3000 router astonished me! I had a studio and household FILLED with multiple PC's and Macs, both desktop and notebook computers, and a PC server plus Mac G5 server for my AppleTV Library, iTunes Library, and this router self-configured itself with each and every computer/device/system that I own, some 12 machines in total, in less than 7 minutes for the full cycle of the auto-connect feature to take place.

That FLOORED me totally, and I'm an advanced networking expert, who was prepared for a completely tough, manual install of this router but figured I'd give it a go with the Auto-Connect Feature of this router, by simply inserting the Cisco-Linksys CD ROM into my PC server's optical drive, and followed the prompts to the letter (to a point), let the router Auto-Configure each and every PC and Mac in my mixed-stable of computers here in my studio and throughout the house, 8 computers here in my studio near the router's plug-in to my Time-Warner RoadRunner HS Turbo Modem, and 4 other computers elsewhere in the house, and I'll be danged if the new E3000 didn't pull off the complete connection routing in less than 7 minutes actual time! CRAZY GOOD!

I immediately fired up the router's web interface and went into the Advanced settings, and renamed the System from default to my regular/normal System's name, set up the web interface for my network Hard Drive and plugged in a 1TB USB external HD for network sharing and backup services, reconfigured the password to my rather complex 26-digit and symbol password for ultimate security purposes, set the "renew DHCP Lease" to my own specific schedule apart from default, adjusted Media and FTP Server setting to active, and a lot of other "host services" to manual settings vs the default settings, and in less than 30 minutes total time I disconnected my former "N-Spec" router, and turned the duties over to the new E3000.

Suffice to say it's been literally plug and play since then, with only a minor glitch to report, and that was perhaps my own fault but it involved updating the firmware to the latest and greatest, and my update went awry somewhat...I ended up having to re-apply the new patch TWICE before it took and set up correctly, and BAM!! All was well again, settings were intact, and when I restarted the System it fired right up, everything popped up green, blue, and yellow LED's like it's supposed to do, and voila! Firmware update a success, all was well, and the system @ 100%.

The Dual-Band aspect of this router gives it a special character, with the ability to transmit and receive signals and data simultaneously, at the same time literally, and maintain its incredible bandwidth in both the 2.4Ghz and 5.8Ghz channels without fault of any sort, and that's an amazing feature! My AppleTV system works significantly better than it did with the old MaxPower N-Spec Routerat full speed ahead, it being a single-band router and some 5 years old at the time I replaced it with the E3000.

I find the web interface to be simple, and simplistic too, a nice interaction to work with when you want to customize any features, or change any settings manually vs the router's automatic setups. I have yet to have to restart or "recycle" this router after some 5 months of use thus far, which I consider to be very, very unusual given the nature of routers in general, but the Cisco-Linksys E3000 seems to be in a class by itself with respect to sustainability. It is also a router that you can place ANYWHERE with respect to its antennas being all internal (6 of them!), as I have placed it UNDER MY WORK STATION now, and there's no difference in the signal being all-pervasive and strong throughout my studio, and home to boot!

I also use the router to handle the Administration of my twin RAID system's web interface, and that uses one of the Gigabit Ethernet Ports of the E3000 and plugs directly into the Areca 1680IX-8 Hardware RAID Controller, and that feature of the router has also worked without fail thus far, no issues at all! I have searched and tried to figure out S*O*M*E* weakness that this new E3000 router has, but alas there is nothing left to write or say with respect to things that are wrong with it, because the dang thing just works 100% for the good!

Every day that I use my system here in the studio and throughout my home I marvel at its consistency, it steadfastness, and its power, just incredible in all those aspects of use with my heavy, heavy needs placed upon it, and it's just fantastic. It would be hard to say "it could be better", because I just don't know HOW or WHAT we could do so as to make it better than it is right now.

I am transmitting millions and millions of bytes of critical information up to Standford University in the Folding@Home program, with 5 active computers in the program here in my home and studio, and it's IMPORTANT that each and every byte gets transmitted up there for the benefit of mankind, and the critical research that the researchers are doing, and this great Cisco-Linksys E3000 keeps the candles "lit" in my contributions to the Folding@Home program hour by hour, day by day, and week by arduous week...it just doesn't fail me, and that is all I could ask of it!

I never thought I'd say something like this about a router, but this thing is SO FAR AHEAD of everything else out there that you can buy for your home or office use for a high-speed data network, be it from a HD Cable Modem system like what I have with me here, a DSL system, whatever way you can critically look at such a thing as a router which literally is the lifeline between you and the internet, and all it can represent, but I'll say this for the record: I don't think that there's anything better being made today, AT ANY PRICE, ANY CONFIGURATION, ANY SETUP WHATSOEVER THAN THE CICSO-LINKSYS E3000 Router!

This thing is King of the Hill! I have actually purchased 4 of them since they were released in early June, 2010. The router that I bought this time went down to Australia to my business partner's home office to use there, because he cannot buy one in Australia at any price: they just aren't offered there yet, so I took it upon myself to score one for him and the network in his home office, and he is just like I am by now: a believer in this E3000 system 100% without qualification, without doubts, and without any negative thoughts whatsoever!

It's not every day that we have products this good come into our lives and uses, and this ladies and gentlemen is the best router that the good, old All-American $$$ can buy, bar none, no doubt as to that statement! The Cisco-Linksys E3000 Dual Band Router gets the Wavey Davey 100% Solid Gold and 5-Star Award for Quality, Value, and Performance, bar none! There isn't anything quite like it no matter what other brands you look at, or even other Cisco-Linksys models for that matter, it stands alone as the No.1 router of any type today, in November 2010.

Wavey Davey - November 14, 2010
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45 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
philpercilla
1.0 out of 5 starsThis router is a total FAIL -- RETURNING TOMORROW to Amazon
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2014
Update 6-22-2014
My kids 2006 17" iMac OS X 10.6.8 AGAIN, could not connect to this router. Restart the router and then the iMac.
THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE
I called their support 2 days ago about the problem with it crapping out at 16GB on eSata on a hard drive plugged into the esata port.
The person could not understand me. WTF? Now with this with a iMac that can connect to my old DLINK DIR-655 A1/A2 300Mbps 2.4Ghz with NO PROBLEMS can not connect to this "top of the line, best of the best Linksys router"?
I wanted to smash the thing on the floor but then I'll be stuck with the $249 charge on my card.
I put my old DLINK DIR-655 back in, it is NOT dual band,it just WORKS.
The iMac could hook up right away.
So I was about to order the Netgear Blackhawk R7000 BUT after reading the posts on yelp about Netgear customer service and it ends after 90 days and then they want you to pay about $120 for another year of "phone" support, I am skirmish about getting into something that may crap out after a few months. The Assurant or Asurion insurance kinda makes it better but some people seem to have been treated bad by their telephone support people (but at least they are in the United States)
Looking at the UBI Edge router Lite and a wireless AP
More command line interface and not a real graphical, easy to setup router (only) BUT from what I read, once you set it up, it never has to be messed with again. People say 7 months, no reboots. I need something that works, too bad this "beast" of a router DOES NOT WORK.

Update 6-19-2014
I tested the hard drive. There are no problems with it. The S.M.A.R.T. is all green. I then hooked up a Thermaltake BlacX eSATA USB Docking Station, connected it eSata, put a 7200 RPM 500GB drive formatted in MS-DOS FAT. In Finder/OS X 10.7.5, after connecting to server 192.168.0.1 (router) it shows 499.98GB free. On the router GUI it only say 465GB free. 30GB in OVERHEAD? And I tested that 3.5" HD before and the S.M.A.R.T. are all green.
Anyway, at about 16GB transferred to it, on a 1Gb wired connection, it came back with "Disk is FULL"
This and like I said, the GUI web interface is for a dyslexic blind person, limited in what can be done (I mean after all, if someone spends $250 on it then it's a good chance they KNOW what they are buying but Linksys STILL made the interface for someone who is retired, in their 70's and never had a computer before. It needs to be more for the "semi pro consumer" who knows how to do home networking (or someone who has used a computer for more 2 years or can at least google it and get a answer).
You tube video
youtu.be/iNHLfp2UUKI
Tried to upload it on here, will try again later. Screen capture file is 6GB in HD. I hate re-encoding videos...

UPDATE 6-18-2014
Trying again to put 78GB to Intek on USB3 and have a Sandisk 16GB flash drive plugged into USB2 copying 14GB at the same time. REALLY making it slow in time, as in like 1 hour for each to complete.
It just stopped and said,"Disk is FULL"
Going to do a hardware test on disk to be sure BUT I doubt it, so this router kinda fails right now as having anything on USB as a network share.

And that and other things makes it to where I probably will return it.

Got it 6/11/2014 and today is 6/17/2014.

I have 31, yes 31 devices that connect (at some point, not all on at the same time) either wired or wireless. The specs say this can handle it.
1 27" iMac 2011 wired
1 20.5" iMac 2010 wired
1 Kodak AIO wired
1 QNAP TS-419+ wired (both net jacks but on fail over) <<--4 TERABYTES IN RAID 10 config with about 3 TERABYTES FULL
1 Dlink DNS-323 NAS wired <<--1 TERABYTE RAID 1 config
1 Ooma wired (BEST HOME PHONE SYSTEM......DITCH AT&T or CRAPCAST and get one...the black list to stop annoying calls/unlisted/800 numbers is unlimited and community based)
1 Dlink DCS-930L camera wired
1 Sharp tv wired
1 Sony blu ray wired
Chromcast
Wii
1 TeleHD TV camera wired
4 cell phones
4 tablets
2 old cells on wi-fi only
1 Mac Mini wireless
1 Apple TV 2 wireless
1 Vizio tv wireless
3 Dlink DCS-930L camera wireless
1 Macbook 13" 2006 white wireless
1 Macbook Pro 15" 2011 wireless
1 iMac 17" 2006 white wireless
1 RCA streaming media box wireless
and not including if I have anyone over and they need a connection.

Problems.

Latest firmware 1.1.7.160582
I still had to reboot the device because items that showed up when they were on as I set this up, after the devices were turned of and "supposedly" releasing their ip they still showed up in the network map and after I turned things on they still could not connect.
So, REBOOT

I have items on wireless that show up as wired.

Can not put a name and assign a ip to a MAC like I could with my old Dlink DIR-655 A1/A2 that lasted 7 YEARS and would need a reboot like once every 2-3 months. And it had 25+ devices connected (or could connect) to it. I could give names to MAC addresses and assign the IP address, so the DHCP was very rarely giving out IP's. Things like the QNAP, needed to assign IP 192.168.0.70 and Dlink DNS-323 to 192.168.0.32 (because that's the IP on the firmware on it), but with this WRT1900AC I can NOT assign the MAC a name. I have to hunt and peck to find somewhere to run a report to see what is assigned a IP by the MAC, where on the Dlink it all showed up right there on the same page.

That is a FAIL on this router. The menu system is laid out for a dyslexic blind person.....ok

I have 4 Dlink DCS-930 cameras, I want to give them IP's like 192.168.0.50/55/60/65 and assign NAMES to the MAC's so I know which camera I am looking at. Can't get it right on this new router.

I setup a online access with this linksys but deleted the account after coming to realize that that leaves a entrance into my internal lan. It's not a VPN, it's just a https login. NOT real fond of others having my password to where it could (in a worst case) get hacked and then have some hackers from Russia or China putting stuff on my NAS's.

I called SUPPORT. Tried any and all numbers TRYING to get someone who

1:English it their FIRST LANGUAGE
2:Live on the same continent as I do

BUT any and all Linksys telephone numbers go to the Philippines.

Even thou we are "supposed" to have our own special support people who deal with just the WRT1900AC, if anything you ask them is NOT on a script they read from they don't know.
And I asked REPEATEDLY to talk to someone who is here in the US, not happening. They don't know of any telephone numbers IN the US.{on a tangent but-->That was a problem with Dell computers back in the mid 90's. I was a Dell Lead Field Engineer and when they switched to call centers in Asia, I, a FE for them, had to go thru that first before speaking to a level 2 tech who was here in the US. That was back then, things should be different now but they are not}

USB3/eSATA -- FAIL
I put a Intek case (2.5" USB3) with a 500GB Hybrid (4GB SSD/500GB platter) Maxtor 7200 RPM drive on both the USB2 first and then the eSata/USB3 connection to use as a simple network share for my iMac's and tablets and phones to be able to pull from. Apple TV to stream movies from it (once recompiled in Apple TV format).
WELL.......
I wanted to copy 80GB from my desktop to the drive. I wanted to do this so I could NOT have to have my QNAP or Dlink NAS on.
The Intek is powered by the USB connection.
I know this drive works, upgrade the firmware from Seagate on it and it was in my Macbook Pro.
If I hook it to my iMac on the powered USB2 hub I have on the desk, I can transfer 100GB to it and never get a error.....so that takes time BUT it works.
Well being plugged into the back of the router after about 3-4GB are transferred to it (either USB2 or faster USB3) the router kicks it back as saying the drive "IS FULL"
I dismount it from the router, plug it in my iMac, select and move the same folders again (and it's on USB2 still but...) it moves just fine. I get NO ERRORS saying the drive is full.
So, the USB ports on the router or the router processing itself, stops the transfer of anything over a few 100 MB's at a time.

SO THAT IS A FAIL for this "beast" of a router....

So I am NOT real pleased with the "support" for this router.

That and after reading and reading because I would want Tomato firmware on the device, there is not any. All has to do with Marvell antenna drivers and that is not a Broadcomm chipset.

So "open source" again, is just bull*s***.

I returned a ASUS RT-N66U router to Tiger Direct (because for one they are here in Miami and that's where they started from) but it was because it just could not handle too much all at once (wireless) and the firmware sucked. And it's USB connection was a FAIL just like this on the WRT1900AC.

I ordered this from Amazon.......THEN it hit me.........WHY AM I BEING CHARGED TAX? I understand when I go to a store in person but I very rarely over the years had ever been charged by Amazon. Then I read they charge tax to people in Florida now. Well I am NOT getting any breaks on the price (because it sells for $249 + TAX right here 10 miles away from me and to return it would be to walk back in the store).
So that's another pissy thing with Amazon BUT back to the router...........

I just don't feel like this thing is "the beast" it was made out to be.

When I am away my wife just wants to turn on her computer and compute.....NOT have to think about rebooting the router to get online. She is not a technical troubleshooting type person.
While this router "appears" to be able to do great things, the lack of 3rd party software/firmware for it puts it in a "do not BUY" category.
I am sure others have had "great" success with using this router but I have not, to the easiness of a simple, informative GUI and looking at whether the open source people are pursuing it to make better software/firmware.

This will be a RETURN in the next few days AFTER I go down the street and but a new router at the same price+tax as I would have to pay to Amazon. Maybe even get it on SALE in the store...Tiger Direct/CompUSA or BestBuy. They will match the price and charge me tax, just like Amazon.
I have over the years bought a LOT of things from Amazon, high price things (>$500) and never thought about it because I was not having to pay tax, so I was saving money. I never pay tax on things from eBay. BUT now having to pay tax, and the same things sell for the same price (most everyday things) right here. I am going to have to start back with going window shopping again.......instead of seeing on the screen.

I DO NOT recommend buying this high priced router that, for right now, is just a basic router with 2.4/5Ghz dual band and 3x3 MIMO.
There will be 4x4 MIMO routers coming out with thought put over the AC rates BUT, and this is the thing people just do NOT understand they just see big numbers but really have no idea of how things operate, that it does NOT matter that you have 10Gbit thought put on wireless to your iPad, it's still NOT going to give it to you because your connection to the net is still slower, and a chain is only as strong as it's weakest link.

Save you money, look for something in the $125-$175 range if you MUST be cutting edge, but don't buy this....not worth it if you want to do any "creative" networking you will be disappointed in the GUI web interface, the problems with moving any file/folder to the network share that is in excess of 16GB because that will fail too.

Asus will be coming out with a RT-86AC (name? I forgot) that is/will be 4x4 MIMO radios with 4 antennas that actually do mean something.
The 4 antennas on this WRT-1900AC are for show. One side is 2.4Ghz and the other is 5Ghz. And "beam forming" is just testing the latency from say antenna 1 and antenna 3 and which ever one is less, that antenna is used so you "theoretically" are getting "faster" speeds by a FEW MICRONS OF A SECOND. The human eye can NOT tell the difference. Oh and Verizon will still lag your Netflix, regardless of how "fast" the wireless speed from a router to your TV is.......
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From the United States

Wavey Davey
5.0 out of 5 stars EASY Set-Up, Connected 12 PC's and Macs in 7 Minutes, PURRRFECT Dual-Band Router!
Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2010
Style: E3000Verified Purchase
The ease of setup of the Cisco-Linksys E3000 router astonished me! I had a studio and household FILLED with multiple PC's and Macs, both desktop and notebook computers, and a PC server plus Mac G5 server for my AppleTV Library, iTunes Library, and this router self-configured itself with each and every computer/device/system that I own, some 12 machines in total, in less than 7 minutes for the full cycle of the auto-connect feature to take place.

That FLOORED me totally, and I'm an advanced networking expert, who was prepared for a completely tough, manual install of this router but figured I'd give it a go with the Auto-Connect Feature of this router, by simply inserting the Cisco-Linksys CD ROM into my PC server's optical drive, and followed the prompts to the letter (to a point), let the router Auto-Configure each and every PC and Mac in my mixed-stable of computers here in my studio and throughout the house, 8 computers here in my studio near the router's plug-in to my Time-Warner RoadRunner HS Turbo Modem, and 4 other computers elsewhere in the house, and I'll be danged if the new E3000 didn't pull off the complete connection routing in less than 7 minutes actual time! CRAZY GOOD!

I immediately fired up the router's web interface and went into the Advanced settings, and renamed the System from default to my regular/normal System's name, set up the web interface for my network Hard Drive and plugged in a 1TB USB external HD for network sharing and backup services, reconfigured the password to my rather complex 26-digit and symbol password for ultimate security purposes, set the "renew DHCP Lease" to my own specific schedule apart from default, adjusted Media and FTP Server setting to active, and a lot of other "host services" to manual settings vs the default settings, and in less than 30 minutes total time I disconnected my former "N-Spec" router, and turned the duties over to the new E3000.

Suffice to say it's been literally plug and play since then, with only a minor glitch to report, and that was perhaps my own fault but it involved updating the firmware to the latest and greatest, and my update went awry somewhat...I ended up having to re-apply the new patch TWICE before it took and set up correctly, and BAM!! All was well again, settings were intact, and when I restarted the System it fired right up, everything popped up green, blue, and yellow LED's like it's supposed to do, and voila! Firmware update a success, all was well, and the system @ 100%.

The Dual-Band aspect of this router gives it a special character, with the ability to transmit and receive signals and data simultaneously, at the same time literally, and maintain its incredible bandwidth in both the 2.4Ghz and 5.8Ghz channels without fault of any sort, and that's an amazing feature! My AppleTV system works significantly better than it did with the old MaxPower N-Spec Routerat full speed ahead, it being a single-band router and some 5 years old at the time I replaced it with the E3000.

I find the web interface to be simple, and simplistic too, a nice interaction to work with when you want to customize any features, or change any settings manually vs the router's automatic setups. I have yet to have to restart or "recycle" this router after some 5 months of use thus far, which I consider to be very, very unusual given the nature of routers in general, but the Cisco-Linksys E3000 seems to be in a class by itself with respect to sustainability. It is also a router that you can place ANYWHERE with respect to its antennas being all internal (6 of them!), as I have placed it UNDER MY WORK STATION now, and there's no difference in the signal being all-pervasive and strong throughout my studio, and home to boot!

I also use the router to handle the Administration of my twin RAID system's web interface, and that uses one of the Gigabit Ethernet Ports of the E3000 and plugs directly into the Areca 1680IX-8 Hardware RAID Controller, and that feature of the router has also worked without fail thus far, no issues at all! I have searched and tried to figure out S*O*M*E* weakness that this new E3000 router has, but alas there is nothing left to write or say with respect to things that are wrong with it, because the dang thing just works 100% for the good!

Every day that I use my system here in the studio and throughout my home I marvel at its consistency, it steadfastness, and its power, just incredible in all those aspects of use with my heavy, heavy needs placed upon it, and it's just fantastic. It would be hard to say "it could be better", because I just don't know HOW or WHAT we could do so as to make it better than it is right now.

I am transmitting millions and millions of bytes of critical information up to Standford University in the Folding@Home program, with 5 active computers in the program here in my home and studio, and it's IMPORTANT that each and every byte gets transmitted up there for the benefit of mankind, and the critical research that the researchers are doing, and this great Cisco-Linksys E3000 keeps the candles "lit" in my contributions to the Folding@Home program hour by hour, day by day, and week by arduous week...it just doesn't fail me, and that is all I could ask of it!

I never thought I'd say something like this about a router, but this thing is SO FAR AHEAD of everything else out there that you can buy for your home or office use for a high-speed data network, be it from a HD Cable Modem system like what I have with me here, a DSL system, whatever way you can critically look at such a thing as a router which literally is the lifeline between you and the internet, and all it can represent, but I'll say this for the record: I don't think that there's anything better being made today, AT ANY PRICE, ANY CONFIGURATION, ANY SETUP WHATSOEVER THAN THE CICSO-LINKSYS E3000 Router!

This thing is King of the Hill! I have actually purchased 4 of them since they were released in early June, 2010. The router that I bought this time went down to Australia to my business partner's home office to use there, because he cannot buy one in Australia at any price: they just aren't offered there yet, so I took it upon myself to score one for him and the network in his home office, and he is just like I am by now: a believer in this E3000 system 100% without qualification, without doubts, and without any negative thoughts whatsoever!

It's not every day that we have products this good come into our lives and uses, and this ladies and gentlemen is the best router that the good, old All-American $$$ can buy, bar none, no doubt as to that statement! The Cisco-Linksys E3000 Dual Band Router gets the Wavey Davey 100% Solid Gold and 5-Star Award for Quality, Value, and Performance, bar none! There isn't anything quite like it no matter what other brands you look at, or even other Cisco-Linksys models for that matter, it stands alone as the No.1 router of any type today, in November 2010.

Wavey Davey - November 14, 2010
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Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars WRT 3200ACM A very nice product, setup was very simple
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2017
Style: WRT3200ACMVerified Purchase
WRT 3200ACM A very nice product, setup was very simple.

Overall performance verses my 4 year old WD N900 router is much better; improved signal strength, improved throughput and so far no drop outs. I started getting drop outs on the old router when we exceeded 12 devices, the WRT has run flawlessly with up to 21 devices so far.

The unit runs quiet and cool – no fan needed, which is nice since fan noise can be quiet annoying.

I manually configured the router (enter 192.168.1.1 into your browser) and used “Smart Setup Tool” to get connected to the internet and do a basic configuration, the setup tool makes this very easy. After that I manually edited a few parameters to “personalize” the network, simplify management and optimize performance as follows:

Changed name of the 5GHz network rather than accept the default of “Name of 2.4Ghz” appended with _5Ghz.
Edited the guest network names and password and turned it off, I will switch it on if needed.
Renamed some of the devices on the network map so that it is obvious which device is which. This make the network map much more useful.
Edited the Host Name and Network Name, personal preference.
Turned off the ability to manage this router wirelessly via Linksys Smart Wi-Fi (Connectivity – Administration tab) to reduce the chance of a wireless hack.

Wireless networking defaults were not optimal for our network so I made the following changes:

Set the 2.4 GHz network to 802.11gn. This router does not support 801.11b so I don’t think there is a difference between the mixed setting and the 802.11gn setting. I don’t have any legacy b only devices so this is not a problem. Not supporting 802.11b avoids the 2.4 GHz radio having to do gymnastics to talk to any b devices this helps 2.4 GHz throughput and avoids the slight decrease in n or g throughput that results from a mixed (with b) setting. I thought about using n only but since g and n can play together (the overhead associated with sending a legacy preamble before the HT preamble is small and g devices can interpret the n preamble) I left g available. I left the channel width setting on auto and it selected 40 MHz i.e., twice the width and double the data rate of the legacy channels.

Set the 5 GHz network to ac only to allow optimum 5 GHz performance, I left the channel width setting on auto and it selected 80 MHz i.e., four times the width and four times the data rate of the legacy channels. I am not quite sure what they mean in the advertising info with regard to 160 MHz channel width since this device only has 4 antennas and 6 are needed to get 160 MHz bandwidth.

I left the channel selection on auto for both networks.

Restricting the router protocols has some potential disadvantages:
1. Legacy devices that are restricted to 2.4 GHz b and/or 5 GHz a and n only will not be able to connect, so if you have older devices this might be a problem.
2. If there are devices running 2.4 GHz b and 5 GHz a and n nearby they might interfere with your network and your network router might interfere with them. I am too far away from my neighbors for this to be a problem but if your neighbors are close you should probably use mixed mode.

Given that the 802.11g protocol was released in 2003 and that manufactures built 802.11g chipsets before 2003 I doubt that many people have many 802.11b devices only.
I would like to know if there is a difference between the between the 2.4 GHz mixed setting and the 2.4 GHz 802.11gn setting. Does the router listen for 802.11b signals and back off to allow legacy transmission to a legacy router when 2.4 GHz mixed is selected? I called tech support but the person I spoke too did not seem to know what I was talking about.

Some users have reported signal strength gains, I measured the signal strength (using a Wi-Fi Analyzer on my phone) before and after installing the new router (in the same location).

On the 2.4Ghz band the signal strength increased by an average of 3dB (double the power) running g and n protocols. This is not a huge improvement but will help in areas with marginal signal strength that are prone to signal drop outs. The increase in signal strength on 2.4Ghz varied from -1dB to 8dB, in looking at the results it looks like beam forming is working and increasing the signal strength in the areas with 2.4Ghz devices with up to an 8dB increase and an average of 4.5dB.

On the 5 GHz band the signal strength increased by an average of 16dB (40 times the power) running mixed mode. This made some previously unreachable (for 5G Hz) areas of the house usable for Wi-Fi and is a great gain in signal strength. The 5 GHz radio designs have probably got a lot better in the last few years and this result alone is a good reason to buy this router. The increase in signal strength varied from 11dB to 20dB and did not seem to be affected by beam forming (possibly due to the fact that phone that I used to take the measurements was on the 5 GHz Wi-Fi network when I took the measurements).

It is a good idea to back up your router configuration (Troubleshooting – Diagnostics tab) to allow a quick restore in the event you have to reset your router.

The Troubleshooting Status report pages are very nice to have.

It would be nice if you could search the router help information embedded on the router. The user guide does not cover as much as the help information on the router and he use of screen shots in the manual limit your ability to search (e.g., you cannot find Backup or Restore by searching the user manual).

I am very happy with this product.
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Dioshy Cruz
4.0 out of 5 stars Great product, but with minor flaws
Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2018
Style: 4000 Sq. ft, 40+ Devices - BlackVerified Purchase
OPENING STATEMENT: This device replaced a "TP-Link AC1200 Wi-Fi Range Extender, AV1200 Powerline Edition" and an "ASUS RT-AC88U".

DESIGN: Love the design and looks of the product. It looks great whenever you place it. It looks like decor or as a techy gadget if it is surrounded by electronics. Anyway, people do not recognize what it is. I have been asked if it is a speaker, an air purifier and even a lamp! The good thing is that it looks great whenever you place it. I really like that the power cord is slightly angled in the tip, which produces no stress on the conector. Well thought, Linksys!

SETUP: Here is a big area for improvement. The setup relies on the color of a single led light on the top of the unit, which indicates the current status of the device. Well, I spent 40 minutes trying to setup this by myself because I was not able to see the light turning purple. I am colorblind, so having a product that its only way of providing feedback is by a single led that changes colors is a huge flaw on the design for me. Single led light is minimalistic and helps a lot with the physical design of the product, but instead of colors Linksys may use flashing patterns. For you, Earthlings, this may not be an issue at all, but for this cute colorblind Saturnian, it is very important. After having assistance from a friend who told me the colors of the led, I was able to setup the device in about 10 minutes. TIP!!!: If your ISP's modem is currently configured to work as a router and you are connecting the Velop directly to the modem, before physically connecting the Velop, disable the router feature, reboot your modem, and proceed after the modem has completed its loading cycle.

GOOD: QoS works great! Companion app is good. Mostly used features are at your fingertips on the app and it is very intuitive. Good UI. The web interface is great as well, but not intuitive in terms of classification of stuff. Configurable!!! I love that this system has many configuration options available for the end user, other than simply enabling/disabling DHCP. For example, people tend to give high praises to Eero (the strongest mesh competitor out there today) due to how simple it is, but their price tag is way over the roof, and you never have control over the device. The Eero people control the system for you, constantly monitor it, they force configuration options/updates on you whenever they like, and you have no real options to configure as a router. For me, it is very important that I have all control over my network and I love my privacy. This is more important to me than having a plug and play experience. Why paying 30% more for a system that I cannot control and is constantly monitored? No way Jose! Velop offers the plug and play experience too, but I love/need the advanced configuration features.

WEIRD: This is my first time working with a mesh system, so what you will read in this section may be the way that mesh works; any experts in the subject are welcome to comment... I found it weird that some of my devices connect to the mesh node that is farther away and not the one that is 5 feet away. Currently, I have 3 devices that are connected to the node that is 20-25 feet away, with 4 concrete walls, decor, furniture, tile, 2 wood doors, and small appliances between them and the node instead of using a node that is 4-6 feet away with no obstructions between the devices and the node. Why is this? Don't get me wrong, the devices never loose connection to the network, but I thought that the whole idea was to connect to the closest node or the one with better signal, at least. Anyway, since the connection never drops, I am not complaining. Another thing is that devices take a long time to switch between nodes. For example, my cellphone takes around 5 mins after I have placed it on a surface before it switches to the closest node. I expected the nodes to redirect in less than a minute. Then, while checking the companion app and the connection to some of my devices, I see that it reports that the connection to those devices is Good, but the devices themselves report Excellent connection. Weird!

BAD: No love for 2.4GHz devices without some tweaking... None of my 2.4GHz-only smart home devices were able to connect to the Velop right away. Why? Well, the Velop combines both the 2.4 and 5GHz bands into a single SSID by default, and this was expected. But, what was not expected is that my devices were never able to identify the 2.4GHz band. Is the Velop "broadcasting" or showing as available the 5GHz band only? I do not know. To get my devices connected I had to separate the bands into two different SSIDs. As soon as I did that, they connected right away. TIP!!!: I gave the 2.4GHz band the original SSID name, and gave the 5GHz band another name. After all was setup and my 2.4GHz-only devices where connected, I switched back to a single SSID, and all my devices (2.4GHz-only and 5Ghz-capable ones) remained connected to their particular band. This is the single negative thing that I have to say about this product. I expected it to broadcast both bands as available, regardless of the single SSID. Maybe the issue is not the Velop and the culprit is the setup process of my devices, which may be looking for a 2.4GHz connection on my phone instead of looking at the actual broadcasted bands... But well, it is what it is.

BOTTOM LINE: Yes, I would buy this product again. Yes, I would recommend this product. Yes, I am happy with the product. Yes, I paid full price for the product; it was not a gift or discounted product. No, I did not receive anything in exchange for this review. Final note: I WISH AMAZON WOULD SEND ME STUFF TO REVIEW THEM!!!
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Susanta Chattopadhyay
5.0 out of 5 stars An Overall Awesome Router - Very Happy
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2016
Style: 3000 ft, 25+ DevicesVerified Purchase
Size: This is really large and requires an area of 13” x 11” approximately on my desk.

Ease of Setup:
It took me about 5 minutes to open the box, unwrap, and I took 5 minutes to read the quick start guide (not required) and did the setup in about 30 minutes, to disconnect all the cords from the old router and connect to the new one and setup was done. I needed to restart Cable Modem once to make sure that the modem start recognizing the new router.

Used a Mac to connect wirelessly as described in quick start guide, but the HTTP URL in the guide did not work for me. I had to use the alternate option to use router IP address 192.168.1.1 to setup.

Glitch found: the URL
may not work, you will need to use 192.168.1.1 to setup

Range of the Router:
Very good. My 5GHz channel ranges very well to 50’ and get 50% result of what I get when sit next to the router, which is 56mbps download. But the 2.4GHz channel is not so much, 2.4GHz signal fades away earlier. So, at 50’, I did have very poor result from 2.4GHz channel. I tried connecting to both channel from the same spot 50’ away from the wall, inside which the router is placed.
I am blown away with the performance of this router - before buying this router I had one Apple Extreme Airport base station with two Airport Express working as range extender, but still I had few blind spots and the wireless network was not performing well. Sometimes I had spotty connections, streaming was slowing down, so that Netflix (via Roku 2) was showing me spinning circle etc. After I setup this router and connected my YuppTV dongle, Roku 2 and Roku 3, my laptops on th 5GHz network and everything is working smoothly.

UI
Easy to setup, easy to manage. But I have been a programmer for long time and used to fiddle things, so not sure how people with lesser experience will feel about this, but from other reviews also this is easy to setup.

Router Cascading for keeping the old network:
Before I purchased this one, as I mentioned earlier, I had a first generation Apple Extreme Airport Base station router and working with 2 airport express extenders. I have almost 30 devices all over the house, regular laptops, tablets and iPads, other utility devices like Garage door opener, Wink hub with GE lights, thermostats etc. So I knew I would not be able to connect all the devices after replacing my original router. To setup all the devices on the new network was going to take some time, considering we have demanding full time job and kids to take care. So, I connected my old Extreme router’s internet port to the EA9500’s ethernet port and restarted Apple Extreme.
Voila - my old networking was working too. This is a nice cascading features, I do not know if this is true for all routers, but worked flawlessly on this one.
Note: I had to change setup for Airport Xtreme to do this. In Airport Utility, in the Network section, I had to change Router Mode from “DHCP and NAT” to “Off (Bridge Mode)”.

Device Prioritization:
This is a nice feature in this - I was running some download on my Mac and at the same time had my Roku running netflix. And I could prioritize Roku from the UI setup. Loved the feature. Did not have Netflix stream suffering after this.

Overall it is a very good router. I do not have much experience other than Apple Extreme, and it is costlier than this. But to me it is well worth the extra money. In last 4 days, I did not have anybody in the family yelling “My wifi is not working….”. However I know that something may go wrong, and if it does, I will update the review accordingly. For now, I am awarding this router 5 stars.

Note: I did not receive a detailed user guide in book form. There is a CD inside the package, which has the guide, but one PDF book with many the languages of the world, but I could not find out the instructions in English language. I contacted their customer support. They are easy to reach, and customer support is very polite and courteous, but they could not solve the problem. The rep helped me to find out the booklet online, but with the same result - it is one big PDF with instructions in many languages, but could not find English. A quick CTRL-F or COMMAND-F (on Mac) to search English did not do any result. Not that I need user guide badly, but for such a pricey and upscale product, Linksys should provide a detailed user guide for old school people like me. But this is not a show stopper for the router itself. And customer support is happy to help you anytime for this router, and so the absence of user guide does not matter that much for me.

Update: It has been almost two weeks, and the router is working flawlessly. I didn't have any problem in last two weeks. Everything remained same as of the first week of use. At this point I am really happy as I invested the money ($400 is a lot of money to me) into this router.
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philpercilla
1.0 out of 5 stars This router is a total FAIL -- RETURNING TOMORROW to Amazon
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2014
Style: WRT 1900ACVerified Purchase
Update 6-22-2014
My kids 2006 17" iMac OS X 10.6.8 AGAIN, could not connect to this router. Restart the router and then the iMac.
THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE
I called their support 2 days ago about the problem with it crapping out at 16GB on eSata on a hard drive plugged into the esata port.
The person could not understand me. WTF? Now with this with a iMac that can connect to my old DLINK DIR-655 A1/A2 300Mbps 2.4Ghz with NO PROBLEMS can not connect to this "top of the line, best of the best Linksys router"?
I wanted to smash the thing on the floor but then I'll be stuck with the $249 charge on my card.
I put my old DLINK DIR-655 back in, it is NOT dual band,it just WORKS.
The iMac could hook up right away.
So I was about to order the Netgear Blackhawk R7000 BUT after reading the posts on yelp about Netgear customer service and it ends after 90 days and then they want you to pay about $120 for another year of "phone" support, I am skirmish about getting into something that may crap out after a few months. The Assurant or Asurion insurance kinda makes it better but some people seem to have been treated bad by their telephone support people (but at least they are in the United States)
Looking at the UBI Edge router Lite and a wireless AP
More command line interface and not a real graphical, easy to setup router (only) BUT from what I read, once you set it up, it never has to be messed with again. People say 7 months, no reboots. I need something that works, too bad this "beast" of a router DOES NOT WORK.

Update 6-19-2014
I tested the hard drive. There are no problems with it. The S.M.A.R.T. is all green. I then hooked up a Thermaltake BlacX eSATA USB Docking Station, connected it eSata, put a 7200 RPM 500GB drive formatted in MS-DOS FAT. In Finder/OS X 10.7.5, after connecting to server 192.168.0.1 (router) it shows 499.98GB free. On the router GUI it only say 465GB free. 30GB in OVERHEAD? And I tested that 3.5" HD before and the S.M.A.R.T. are all green.
Anyway, at about 16GB transferred to it, on a 1Gb wired connection, it came back with "Disk is FULL"
This and like I said, the GUI web interface is for a dyslexic blind person, limited in what can be done (I mean after all, if someone spends $250 on it then it's a good chance they KNOW what they are buying but Linksys STILL made the interface for someone who is retired, in their 70's and never had a computer before. It needs to be more for the "semi pro consumer" who knows how to do home networking (or someone who has used a computer for more 2 years or can at least google it and get a answer).
You tube video
youtu.be/iNHLfp2UUKI
Tried to upload it on here, will try again later. Screen capture file is 6GB in HD. I hate re-encoding videos...

UPDATE 6-18-2014
Trying again to put 78GB to Intek on USB3 and have a Sandisk 16GB flash drive plugged into USB2 copying 14GB at the same time. REALLY making it slow in time, as in like 1 hour for each to complete.
It just stopped and said,"Disk is FULL"
Going to do a hardware test on disk to be sure BUT I doubt it, so this router kinda fails right now as having anything on USB as a network share.

And that and other things makes it to where I probably will return it.

Got it 6/11/2014 and today is 6/17/2014.

I have 31, yes 31 devices that connect (at some point, not all on at the same time) either wired or wireless. The specs say this can handle it.
1 27" iMac 2011 wired
1 20.5" iMac 2010 wired
1 Kodak AIO wired
1 QNAP TS-419+ wired (both net jacks but on fail over) <<--4 TERABYTES IN RAID 10 config with about 3 TERABYTES FULL
1 Dlink DNS-323 NAS wired <<--1 TERABYTE RAID 1 config
1 Ooma wired (BEST HOME PHONE SYSTEM......DITCH AT&T or CRAPCAST and get one...the black list to stop annoying calls/unlisted/800 numbers is unlimited and community based)
1 Dlink DCS-930L camera wired
1 Sharp tv wired
1 Sony blu ray wired
Chromcast
Wii
1 TeleHD TV camera wired
4 cell phones
4 tablets
2 old cells on wi-fi only
1 Mac Mini wireless
1 Apple TV 2 wireless
1 Vizio tv wireless
3 Dlink DCS-930L camera wireless
1 Macbook 13" 2006 white wireless
1 Macbook Pro 15" 2011 wireless
1 iMac 17" 2006 white wireless
1 RCA streaming media box wireless
and not including if I have anyone over and they need a connection.

Problems.

Latest firmware 1.1.7.160582
I still had to reboot the device because items that showed up when they were on as I set this up, after the devices were turned of and "supposedly" releasing their ip they still showed up in the network map and after I turned things on they still could not connect.
So, REBOOT

I have items on wireless that show up as wired.

Can not put a name and assign a ip to a MAC like I could with my old Dlink DIR-655 A1/A2 that lasted 7 YEARS and would need a reboot like once every 2-3 months. And it had 25+ devices connected (or could connect) to it. I could give names to MAC addresses and assign the IP address, so the DHCP was very rarely giving out IP's. Things like the QNAP, needed to assign IP 192.168.0.70 and Dlink DNS-323 to 192.168.0.32 (because that's the IP on the firmware on it), but with this WRT1900AC I can NOT assign the MAC a name. I have to hunt and peck to find somewhere to run a report to see what is assigned a IP by the MAC, where on the Dlink it all showed up right there on the same page.

That is a FAIL on this router. The menu system is laid out for a dyslexic blind person.....ok

I have 4 Dlink DCS-930 cameras, I want to give them IP's like 192.168.0.50/55/60/65 and assign NAMES to the MAC's so I know which camera I am looking at. Can't get it right on this new router.

I setup a online access with this linksys but deleted the account after coming to realize that that leaves a entrance into my internal lan. It's not a VPN, it's just a https login. NOT real fond of others having my password to where it could (in a worst case) get hacked and then have some hackers from Russia or China putting stuff on my NAS's.

I called SUPPORT. Tried any and all numbers TRYING to get someone who

1:English it their FIRST LANGUAGE
2:Live on the same continent as I do

BUT any and all Linksys telephone numbers go to the Philippines.

Even thou we are "supposed" to have our own special support people who deal with just the WRT1900AC, if anything you ask them is NOT on a script they read from they don't know.
And I asked REPEATEDLY to talk to someone who is here in the US, not happening. They don't know of any telephone numbers IN the US.{on a tangent but-->That was a problem with Dell computers back in the mid 90's. I was a Dell Lead Field Engineer and when they switched to call centers in Asia, I, a FE for them, had to go thru that first before speaking to a level 2 tech who was here in the US. That was back then, things should be different now but they are not}

USB3/eSATA -- FAIL
I put a Intek case (2.5" USB3) with a 500GB Hybrid (4GB SSD/500GB platter) Maxtor 7200 RPM drive on both the USB2 first and then the eSata/USB3 connection to use as a simple network share for my iMac's and tablets and phones to be able to pull from. Apple TV to stream movies from it (once recompiled in Apple TV format).
WELL.......
I wanted to copy 80GB from my desktop to the drive. I wanted to do this so I could NOT have to have my QNAP or Dlink NAS on.
The Intek is powered by the USB connection.
I know this drive works, upgrade the firmware from Seagate on it and it was in my Macbook Pro.
If I hook it to my iMac on the powered USB2 hub I have on the desk, I can transfer 100GB to it and never get a error.....so that takes time BUT it works.
Well being plugged into the back of the router after about 3-4GB are transferred to it (either USB2 or faster USB3) the router kicks it back as saying the drive "IS FULL"
I dismount it from the router, plug it in my iMac, select and move the same folders again (and it's on USB2 still but...) it moves just fine. I get NO ERRORS saying the drive is full.
So, the USB ports on the router or the router processing itself, stops the transfer of anything over a few 100 MB's at a time.

SO THAT IS A FAIL for this "beast" of a router....

So I am NOT real pleased with the "support" for this router.

That and after reading and reading because I would want Tomato firmware on the device, there is not any. All has to do with Marvell antenna drivers and that is not a Broadcomm chipset.

So "open source" again, is just bull*s***.

I returned a ASUS RT-N66U router to Tiger Direct (because for one they are here in Miami and that's where they started from) but it was because it just could not handle too much all at once (wireless) and the firmware sucked. And it's USB connection was a FAIL just like this on the WRT1900AC.

I ordered this from Amazon.......THEN it hit me.........WHY AM I BEING CHARGED TAX? I understand when I go to a store in person but I very rarely over the years had ever been charged by Amazon. Then I read they charge tax to people in Florida now. Well I am NOT getting any breaks on the price (because it sells for $249 + TAX right here 10 miles away from me and to return it would be to walk back in the store).
So that's another pissy thing with Amazon BUT back to the router...........

I just don't feel like this thing is "the beast" it was made out to be.

When I am away my wife just wants to turn on her computer and compute.....NOT have to think about rebooting the router to get online. She is not a technical troubleshooting type person.
While this router "appears" to be able to do great things, the lack of 3rd party software/firmware for it puts it in a "do not BUY" category.
I am sure others have had "great" success with using this router but I have not, to the easiness of a simple, informative GUI and looking at whether the open source people are pursuing it to make better software/firmware.

This will be a RETURN in the next few days AFTER I go down the street and but a new router at the same price+tax as I would have to pay to Amazon. Maybe even get it on SALE in the store...Tiger Direct/CompUSA or BestBuy. They will match the price and charge me tax, just like Amazon.
I have over the years bought a LOT of things from Amazon, high price things (>$500) and never thought about it because I was not having to pay tax, so I was saving money. I never pay tax on things from eBay. BUT now having to pay tax, and the same things sell for the same price (most everyday things) right here. I am going to have to start back with going window shopping again.......instead of seeing on the screen.

I DO NOT recommend buying this high priced router that, for right now, is just a basic router with 2.4/5Ghz dual band and 3x3 MIMO.
There will be 4x4 MIMO routers coming out with thought put over the AC rates BUT, and this is the thing people just do NOT understand they just see big numbers but really have no idea of how things operate, that it does NOT matter that you have 10Gbit thought put on wireless to your iPad, it's still NOT going to give it to you because your connection to the net is still slower, and a chain is only as strong as it's weakest link.

Save you money, look for something in the $125-$175 range if you MUST be cutting edge, but don't buy this....not worth it if you want to do any "creative" networking you will be disappointed in the GUI web interface, the problems with moving any file/folder to the network share that is in excess of 16GB because that will fail too.

Asus will be coming out with a RT-86AC (name? I forgot) that is/will be 4x4 MIMO radios with 4 antennas that actually do mean something.
The 4 antennas on this WRT-1900AC are for show. One side is 2.4Ghz and the other is 5Ghz. And "beam forming" is just testing the latency from say antenna 1 and antenna 3 and which ever one is less, that antenna is used so you "theoretically" are getting "faster" speeds by a FEW MICRONS OF A SECOND. The human eye can NOT tell the difference. Oh and Verizon will still lag your Netflix, regardless of how "fast" the wireless speed from a router to your TV is.......
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I.P.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great router despite frivolous feaures
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2012
Style: AC1750Verified Purchase
Summary: A great router if you need one now, and are looking to futureproof your setup; and the Cloud services are optional (after the initial setup)

My previous router: DIR-655 for about 5 years.

Review: My last router stopped working after many years of great service. I was in a pickle: do I buy an 'n' router, the standard created over 5 years ago (ancient by computer standards), or do I get the newer (and untested) 'AC' standard for more $$?

What convinced me was the reviews for the EA4500 v2. My thinking was, if this thing is basically the EA4500 with support for the new wireless standard, then why not pay an extra 40$ for the increase in technology? I assumed it would not be faster since I was still using g/n, but as it turns out, this thing smokes my old router (see speeds below).

The big selling point that Linksys tries to push is the 'App' feature. I'll put it to you like this: have you ever wanted to check your home internet status while you were, say, on business in another country? Or did you ever think, 'geeze, i forgot to change the parental settings!' and wanted to up the porn filter at home from your office?

Yeah, me neither.

Routers to me are like the cement foundation of your home: I appreciate they might be the most critical part of the house, but hopefully I'll never have to bother with them. A bad router (or cement job) is one that requires attention after the initial setup. Hopefully the first and last time I looked at my EA6500 router screen was a few days ago when i took it out of the box.

Basically, the programs ('Apps') that are accessed via registering for their Cloud service (free) is an attempt to be more Macintosh, which the kids find trendy these days. Your ea6500 MUST connect to Linksys for the initial setup, but after that you can choose not to create a Cloud account, which is what I chose to do.

Be warned that as a Comcast customer, I had to update to the latest firmware for the router to work; something about hybrid IPv6 usage. That is RIDICULOUS, setting up a router should be easy. Although not technically difficult, it was still a pain and frustrating because I could have manually setup the connection myself if given the opportunity; sometimes these automated setups are more trouble. I imagine as time goes by, this will no longer be an issue as newest firmware ships. This is why I didn't subtract stars.

Granted I've only had this for a couple of days, but there have been no dropped connections thus far. I usually wait longer to write reviews, but I wanted to let people know who are in my position: this is a great router.

Pros:
+Very fast wireless transfer rates ('g'= 4.0mb/sec up from 1.9mb/sec, 'n'=14 mb/sec up from 7 mb/sec). Note that I lack dual channel clients.
+Very fast wired tx rates (gigabit ethernet at around 75 mb/sec compared to the DIR-655 at around 30 mb/sec)
+Excellent range (not a place in my 3 level townhome that I don't get signal)
+Much smaller than the picture makes it look. Sleek design.
+Linksys name to back up the product.
+Great attention to detail: for example, you can disable the blinking lights on the router so my living room doesn't look like a discotheque. Cool!

Cons:
-I had to update the firmware in order to setup the router: most complicated router setup since my 802.11a router!
-Need internet access to Linksys to setup the router.
-'AC' standard not widely available yet. I have no way of testing to check speeds, and Cnet and others have not yet reviewed this product.

And the Apps are for me are neither negative nor positive; they are there if you want them.

EDIT: 10/14/12 The router is still working great and have had no problems thus far. A friend reminded me that I forgot to include another frivolous feature: the 'Simple Tap' card. It allows you to add a compatible phone to your network without having to type in a password. Push a button on the router, swipe the card on your phone, and you're connected. Again, I don't think this feature offers any real convenience (what's so hard about typing in a password?), and you have to wonder, how much do all these silly features add to the price of the router? Still, you can disable all of these, and I'm sure someone somewhere will find the Simple Tap and Cloud features useful.

EDIT:1/21/12 Still working with no problems. Because I'm accustomed to the DIR-655, I changed the location of the router page. It's now 192.168.0.1, and that was a breeze to do (I'm old and don't want to have to remember a new string of numbers). I did setup a new media server with a reserved IP with no issues, remote access is working well. The speed is still amazing (gigabit ethernet WAN as well). I have now mounted the router vertically behind a chest and it's completely hidden. I can only speak from my own experience (n=1), so take this statement with a grain of salt: this is the best router ever.

EDIT:5/10/13 Still no issues or disconnects at any time. We have added a lot of wireless clients, 16 total (laptops, iphones, ipods, etc), and there are no connection problems. However, this new 802.11ac wireless standard has been slow to catch on and there are as of yet no decent 'ac' wireless adapters. So, buying this now is still an investment in the future. It's a bit frustrating, it's like having a helipad ready to go, and now I just need helicopters to come down in price. :) Technology moves quickly though, my DIR-655 was the same way with the then draft 'n', and now it's everywhere. There are rumors of the 2013 Apple computers supporting the wireless new standard, so we'll see.
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Crocuta
3.0 out of 5 stars Poor wired and wireless speed
Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2014
Verified Purchase
I use two wireless routers to cover both levels of our home, with the cable modem feeding into the downstairs router and an in-wall Ethernet line running between it and the upstairs router. I set up the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz wireless networks to be the same (except channel) between the levels so we can roam freely without having to change networks on our client devices.

I bought two of these EA6350 AC1200 routers to replace a pair of Linksys EA2500 routers (10/100 LAN dual band wireless) that I had used previously.The previous ones had replaced a pair of higher-end Asus RT-N56U routers (Gigabit LAN dual band wireless) that both had hardware problems unresolved by Asus despite returns. I leaned toward another Linksys product because the EA2500 routers had been completely stable and reliable for a couple of years now, and my old WRT-56G routers before that had been incredible workhorses. I was only replacing the EA2500 routers because my ISP had upgraded my Internet speed to 105 Mbps download and the EA2500 routers couldn't give me the full potential of that connection. I tested this by pulling out my two gigabit Asus routers and seeing a dramatic increase in both wired and wireless performance when moving to the higher-end routers. Unfortunately, they lasted less than a week before failing again, so I was back in the router market.

I considered the latest Linksys AC1900 router, but it had terrible reviews. I considered the latest Asus AC1900 router, but it is quite expensive, and I saw some inkling of reviewers describing the condition that my older Asus routers had suffered from. That spooked me. I chose this model because the price was decent, and the rated speeds should have easily been sufficient to fully exploit my new Internet speeds. Unfortunately, it did not turn out that way. This product performed quite poorly in my speed tests and I am returning both. (Still unsure which model I will replace them with.)

My initial impression of this product was quite positive. It is a nice-looking box and it feels quite solid. One minor improvement over the EA2500 that I appreciated was that the light that flashes while it's starting up has been moved from a tiny LED on the back to a large one on the front. When you're waiting for it to start up, before starting your connected devices, it's nice not to have to crane your head around for a couple of minutes to see when it's ready.

I also appreciated the new initial configuration system that allows you to set up the router via wireless. That allowed me to use a Surface Pro computer to set this up without initially disturbing my existing network. One problem is that they are so sure that you will run through their guided setup that they put a big roadblock in the way of anyone who knows what settings they want and just wants to go to manual setup. There is a link that says click here to go to manual setup, and it does take you there, but a few steps into the process is asks for the router password. Next to it, there is a message saying this is the password you chose in guided setup. Well, yeah, unless you didn't go through guided setup. Nothing on the modem, or in the printed documentation said what the default password is. Luckily, it wasn't too hard to guess. I tried leaving it empty, then 'password', then 'admin' and the last one worked. After that, all the setup options worked well and it was easy to set up the modem the way I wanted it. Other than that one password issue, I would call the setup very smooth, but I recommend that you just go through the guided setup, even if you want to do it manually, then go in manually after that.

I've read a lot of complaints about Linksys asking you to make an online account to use access your network settings remotely. I went ahead and did that (I don't really see the big deal... a zillion other companies have my email address). I liked that system. The iPad app worked very nicely, and I am sorry I won't have the option of using that.

So, one might think that I was very happy at this point, and I was. Setting up the router went well (I only set up the downstairs one... the one that plugs directly into the modem), the wireless signals were strong, and everything connected nicely to the new network. The next step for me was to run the new network through speedtests. I used the well-known Ookla Speedtest web site (on my Windows PC) and their iOS app on my iPad Air. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a dog of a router when it comes to speed.

With all respect to the reviewers who have called this fast, I did not have that experience. Of course I have no idea why others seem to perceive this as fast, but I wonder whether some reviewers were giving general impressions after upgrading from much slower products. Perhaps some simply had an Internet connection that is not fast enough to push a router to its limits and so the performance completely met the potential of the connection to their ISP. Perhaps I would have thought it was fast if I hadn't had the Asus router to compare it to. At any rate, I was disappointed and am returning the products. For those who don't want to delve into the numbers, you can stop here. That's the gist of it. For those who do, I'll follow with the details.

The test equipment I used is as follows. The ISP is Comcast and the cable modem is a Technicolor Gateway (first series) set to bridge mode (meaning its internal router and wireless network are turned off, so it only acts as a modem). The gateway runs via Ethernet cable to the router (one of three in these tests: this gigabit EA6350, the 10/100 EA2500, and the gigabit Asus RT-N56U). The router runs an Ethernet wire to my Dell XPS 420 Windows 7 PC (gigabit as well), to the upstairs router (an EA2500 for all these tests... none of the tests involved it), to a NAS device and to a Vonage box. All routers were hooked up in the same way, with the same equipment.

Each router was set up with two wireless networks, with nearly identical settings (differences noted in text). There was a 2.4 GHz network set up on channel 1 with a 40 MHz bandwidth (except for the EA6250, which was set to an 80 MHz bandwidth). My home is rural and no other wireless networks are in range. The upstairs modem is set to use a 20 MHz channel 11, so there is no overlap. There was a 5 GHz network set up with auto for bandwith and channels (because 5 GHz channels are non-overlapping and dynamically adjust to conditions). Each router was set up with the same LAN settings, a static IP of 192.168.1.1 and the same static DNS settings. The router handles internal DHCP. No two routers were turned on at the same time. For each LAN test, I restarted the Gateway, then turned on the router, then started up the PC. For each wireless test, I also turned off wifi on my iPad, then turned it back on. I ran the Ookla Speedtest for each, specifying the same nearby Comcast server that Ookla tends to choose for me anyway. I ran each test three times. I thought about averaging the results, but all three tests for a particular setup, were so close (< 1Mbps difference) that I just noted the highest of the three. I am not going to report the upload speeds because my limit is 10 Mbps and all combinations uploaded at around 11 Mbps. No story there. Here are the download results.

Wired Performance (the Windows 7 PC only)

Directly connected to the Gateway: 121.17 Mbps
Asus RT-56U: 120.41 Mbps
EA6350: 91.64 Mbps
EA2500: 81.32 Mbps

As you can see, the Asus router extracts a very small overhead, but this router (EA 6350) costs me close to 30 Mbps of download speed. The EA 2500 is slower still, but its theoretical maximum speed (100 Mbps) is slower than my Internet connection (105 Mbps), so one would expect that it cannot actually move data at 100 Mbps. Also, some may note that I actually get a faster speed than I am rated for. I can only assume that is because I am on a lightly-used segment of the network with some fairly new Comcast backend equipment. I don't really know the details, but the 120 Mbps is consistent out of the gateway. Now I know that some folks on much slower speeds might wonder why I am complaining about 91 Mbps, but I pay for 105 Mbps and Comcast is actually delivering >105 Mbps (how often do you hear that?), so I want my network to meet its potential. I do photo and video editing, and back up to the cloud. When I move large files around, I don't want to lose 30 Mbps of potential speed.

Wireless Performance (iPad Air only)

5 Ghz Network

Asus RT-N56U: 120.84 Mbps
EA6350: 88.41 Mbps
EA2500: 28.22 Mbps

2.4 GHz Network

Asus RT-N56U: 33.54 Mbps
EA6350: 26.46 Mbps
EA2500: 25.39 Mbps

I am not particularly concerned with the 2.4 GHz performance, though the Asus still performs significantly better, but I am quite concerned with the 5 GHz performance. You can see that the Asus once again gives me very nearly all the speed the connection is capable of, but the EA6350 extracts a large performance hit. Could I live with the EA6350? Sure, but why pay over $300 for two brand new routers that are not going to meet the potential of my existing network? I'd rather pay a little more and meet that potential, plus leave room for future growth. Then, in a few years, when speeds go up again, I may not have to buy new routers again. Of course, if the stupid Asus routers could run for a reasonable length of time without having to be constantly restarted (see my review of those for details), then I wouldn't have to buy any routers at all now, but they will simply not run reliably so I am back in the market.

Anyway, there it is. Take it for what it's worth to you. If you are on a 25 Mbps download from your ISP, none of this probably means anything for your performance. I imagine this router is more than capable of meeting those needs. But if you are on a faster connection, or expect to be in the near future, I would spend the extra to get some better performance.
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JustAnotherEngineer
5.0 out of 5 stars Great software, easy to use, and one of the Best Routers currently available
Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2012
Style: N900Verified Purchase
I started using this router - the beginning of August, 2012. I had heard that the new software (Cisco Cloud Connect) was very intuitive and easy to use, despite some early controversy about it. By the way, many of the 1 star reviews are based on concerns about privacy that have been put to rest by the manufacturer.

This router is among a select few "state of the art" routers offering multiple but simultaneous operation on both the 2.4 and 5.0GHz bands - each band is capable of 3 streams (connections). This is a so called 900 router (the current gold standard for home routers).

Much has been written about the new software - some of which was full of praise (including a glowing CNET review) and some of which is quite damning (including many 1 star reviews here on Amazon). The bottom line is that this software is wonderfully easy to use and any concerns that Cisco might be monitoring your internet activity have been put to rest by the manufacturer. Cisco has revised and clarified their policies to make it abundantly clear that this is a NON ISSUE. See Cisco's remarks posted right here on Amazon. So many of these 1 star reviews are quite dated.

Also remember that Cisco allows you to opt out of this software altogether and administer your router locally with no connection to Cisco or the cloud (internet).

What we have here is a "top of the line" advanced router that is very easy to set up thanks to its intuitive software. That is exactly what I wanted ---- because routers can be quite difficult to setup/manage, particularly the very best (and most advanced) ones. The EA 4500 is very easy to setup and is a true "set and forget" type of device.

So, what is not to like? The software and router are great and the fact that it can be managed in the cloud (meaning the router can be accessed via the internet) is largely unimportant. You will, most likely, just like me, simply set it up (using all or most of the simple software defaults) and forget about it! But for those of you who have the rare need to manage a router once it is set up , then you can access your router via any internet connection if you have passed Cisco's extensive security measures.

As of August, 2012, the other competing routers you should look at are the Asus RT-N66U, WD (Western Digital) N900 and the Netgear R6300. I based my choice on Cisco's very intuitive software and very good range. While it may not always be the best (according to professional reviews), it has a better than average range.

What may confuse many future buyers is that there is a new DRAFT (meaning far from finished) standard that is coming to Wi-Fi and routers. You will see, no doubt, many new routers coming to market boosting of conformance to the "draft" or the unfinished AC standard (802.11ac). The fact that NO clients (meaning there is NOT ONE real world receiving device) that exists for this new and yet to be finished standard is never pointed out. While meaningless, every router manufacturer will start to bring out new devices, or firmware upgrades to claim "compliance" to this new DRAFT standard of AC. You can, at least for the next couple of years, largely ignore this spec.

If you want a high performance router that simultaneously operates on both bands, can easily handle 3 simultaneous signals per band and works with all current standards and devices - then this is the one for you. If you want a set and forget type of device that is easy to setup ---this is also the one for you. Highly recommended.

I should add this router also creates a GUEST network (a network that can never access your home files).
Yet, if friends come over, they will be greeted with an easy Wi-Fi connection. You can turn off this feature easily in the setup but it is a real convenience that most people will like. Frankly, I doubt there will be many that turn it off since it is both secure and really convenient for guests. Yet to be fair, most other new high end routers now also offer this same feature. So it is not unique to this router yet a welcome addition to the feature set of most newer high end routers.

I'm hesitant to give performance figures. What I can say is that I have a large home. This router is located on the second story of my home, in the north most corner. I routinely connect on the first floor, on the south most corner, with excellent results. By accident, I had created a worse case scenario - yet I get top-notch results. There may be even better performing routers available but I'll take the easy set-up of this one versus all comers.

I guess you could say I am happy with my purchase.
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Harrison Whitebread
1.0 out of 5 stars An Honest Review - EA9300 is Failure Prone
Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2019
Style: AC4000Verified Purchase
This router lasted precisely 17 hours, give or take a few minutes. And no, I did not get a replacement - I sent it right back to Amazon for a refund and haven't looked back. If you are concerned with reliability in your home (or even office), Netgear Orbi is the ONLY way to go, not anything from Linksys - at least at the writing of this review (January 2019). I have tried 3 different setups (the EA9300 being one of them), and the Netgear Orbi (RBK22, to be exact) seems to be the most reliable, the easiest to set up and the coolest (actual operating temperature and aesthetics). If that's all you need to convince you to move on from purchasing outdated, poorly manufactured Linksys equipment, then read no further and continue on with your day. However, if you have already bought the EA9300 and are experiencing problems and cannot seem to understand what is going on, continue reading. If you have bought this router, and if you can, submit an RMA to Amazon right now - provided it's not too late to do so. Steer clear of Linksys. They need to revise their products BIG TIME. Notably, it doesn't matter where you buy this router - Amazon, Walmart, "Retailer X" - this router is bad news and nothing more.

** Install: Is very similar to any Linksys Smart router setup - if you want to know how that is, look it up online. To do it right, you need to use the supplied patch to connect to PC or Mac to view in a browser, or if you're lucky, you can access it via wireless. Truly, the standard for setting up a router was set by both Linksys and Netgear - and the GUI for both are pretty straightforward. I will admit that the Linksys is more or less user friendly than Netgear - the menus in Linksys are quite aesthetic and easy on the eyes, but it is not easy to find things that you want if you don't know what to look for. I could say the same about Netgear, but the fact that it is more novel for me as the consumer (having recently switched over) is biased, so take that opinion with a grain of salt. I would say if you are uncomfortable with tech in general, you still have little to worry about - it is extremely easy to set this router up for use in the home. Even if you're new at it, the quick install guide in the box give very clear instructions. As a side note, if your ISP (internet service provider, ATT Uverse, etc.) does not allow their modem to be put into bridge mode (where the modem acts as a passthru to the router, which then manages the service), I would set your router up as an Access Point (AP). For tips on how to do this for your specific router, you can google it - in my experience in IT (CTO of a consulting company), 90% of problems with a router hooked into a modem stem from there being a conflict in the two pieces of hardware not working together. I've seen one network setup where the increase in speed was 400% (10 Mbps to 40 Mbps) just based on switching the router to act as an AP of the modem rather than an independent router (typically they default plug-n-play function). If you're in the market for a router because you're paying for internet and not getting it from your router (whether supplied by the ISP or not), check those settings. It can make or break a residential or office LAN (local area network).

**Performance: I'm long winded, so bear with me. As I previously mentioned, setting this router up in my home was meant to replace my CISCO (Linksys) EA4500, which had died from heat and dust exposure...from obvious neglect. Being the hands on nutcase I am, I cracked the EA4500 case open and verified it was toast - the board showed severe signs of scorching, especially near the antennas. Typically (as many IT pros will attest to), the power source is usually the cause for equipment failure (which is why battery backups and ceramic surge protectors are used in high-dollar setups). Well in this case, the actual power brick for the EA4500 was toast - despite being on a reliable power center. I could have replaced the power brick, but knowing that there was scorching at the antennas, it didn't feel like a smart move on my part, especially since its technology is far outdated. Now, to the meat and potatoes of the EA9300:

The advantage of the EA9300, as advertised by Linksys, over the older style routers, like the EA4500, is that MU-MIMO (or Multi User, Multi input, Multi output) is the method in which signals are sent to devices. Simply put, if you are familiar with how to wire a set of light bulbs, you don't wire them in series (one right after another using a wire to connect each). You put them in parallel, so that resistance is not increasing across the circuit and your light bulb at the end of the chain isn't totally dim. Well, similar to the light bulb at the end of the chain, the older routers would place a device at the end of the signal cascade and therefore, it would have much less reservation on the bandwidth (whereas devices stuck higher up on the chain have most of it). The difference with these newer MU-MIMO router setups is that they put your device in equal with all devices, much like the light bulbs that run in parallel. Everyone gets the same slice of cake and they get to eat it all at the same time. Of course, there are some small issues with my analogy, but for all intents and purposes, this is the feel you get for reading Linksys's listing and box advertisements of the EA9300. You think you're getting this kind of performance for the price you pay the retailer. NOPE

Well, the EA9300 may have a fancy processor to handle sending devices the same signal and it may have an extra 5GHz band, but they don't work out of the box. On two, COUNT EM TWO, occasions from TWO different retailers (Amazon and Walmart), this router performed EXACTLY the same in both setup, performance and longevity - about 17 hours from Amazon and 13 hours from Walmart). Now before Linksys hires a wise guy to take me out, I want to say that since power source from the wall and the PoE (power over ethernet) are the the only variables with me as the consumer trying to use their product, I voltage tested my power supply [on the off chance it was not stable]. I sat for an entire hour with my leads in the plugs (the approximate time it takes to fully set up a networking system in a residence under normal circumstances). I had no fluctuations in voltage, down to the 100th decimal. Readings were a steady 120.00 V. Regarding PoE, it's not supported by the Arris ATT Uverse modem. So just so we're clear - it's not anything I've done or my network setup. Furthermore, the Netgear Orbi RBK22 has been on for two days and it's not moved one hair off the maximum speeds provided by the ISP.

So here's what happens with the EA9300 when you take it out of the box. You plug the router in - setup seems fine. Speeds after setup are EXACTLY what you're paying for...and that lasts about 1 hour...then it starts...to...slow...down. The router becomes hotter and hotter (even with an auxiliary fan - not plugged into the router, but into AC power), reaching surface temperatures of about 43-48 C (which is hot to the touch). This continues until the 5 GHz bands start to drop in and out until you have a broadcasted SSID, but with which connection is not possible. But that's not all! While temperatures rise and connections are not possible, the 4 port switch on the back starts to emit an ozone smell, then a burnt rubber smell. After about 2 minutes of this, it gets really bad; the LED lights on the top of the router (White Linksys logo) starts to flash incessantly as if is trying to reboot or install a firmware update...or...wait a second, tell me that it's overheated?! So at this point, you disconnect it from Ethernet and power and wait until surface temperatures return to about 25 C (room temperature, which takes about an hour and a few minutes). Plug it back in after a cooldown and what do you know - it still doesn't work! Burnt rubber smell is now extremely present and while the light is no longer flashing, and while it is possible to connect to any of the three channels (2.4 or either 5GHz), you cannot stay connected and you cannot access the internet. After about 15 minutes - same LED flashing and same inability to connect to the broadcasted SSID's. I'll state again this EXACT thing happened with two different EA9300 routers from two different retailers on two separate days. Call it coincidence?

So...here's my hypothesis with this router and subsequently why you shouldn't buy it (as if the review thus far wasn't proof enough).
There is a high powered processor in this thing that is not getting enough cooling. Traditional routers' cooling solutions were always passive, because they weren't dealing out that much heat. They weren't doing that much and if they were, they were assigned a little 40 mm fan that just kept air flow moving. If you're familiar with network switches, traditional routers were no more than a 4 or 5 port managed switch with a 6th or 7th port dedicated to a 2.4 or 5 GHz wireless signal. Even in the days of just 802.11g, it just wasn't that complex.

Obviously, with ISP's pushing more speeds these days and the increasing number of wireless devices in the LAN, a demand has been made by the general consumer to get as much WiFi for as little possible. Well, one model to solve this problem is to beef up the internals of the traditional router to handle a much heavier workload - with the trick being to balance size and shape. Another model is to have an array of nodes scattered around an area to form a mesh that allows the signal [and work done by the network] to be commanded by the fastest path possible back to a central node (which there may be more than one of, by the way). The latter model has been implemented in the enterprise environment for years, but only recently has it been refined to accommodate higher bandwidths at the consumer market - where 4K video and other high bandwidth resources are required. I think the EA9300 would be a fine router if the system had an effective method of cooling, because when it worked, it worked. No doubt about it. I'm sure it's as simple as using an improved thermal paste on the heatsink for pennies on the dollar...or maybe even using thermal paste period. But the fact remains that Linksys struck out on the EA9300 and anyone who decides to buy it does so at their own risk.
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Kaniki
4.0 out of 5 stars good router, but missing feaures in the software that I would have liked to have been there.
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2015
Style: WRT54GSVerified Purchase
I bought mine used, and so far, I have not really had any problem. It has worked good, and if it works for years, i will be happy. I came from another brand that was a wireless N brand, but it only lasted about 2 years before it started majorly glitching, and since I had a switch that looked very similar to this, same brand too, and have had it for many years with no problems, I figured I would give this one a try.

The twin antenna's do have good reception, but I can not say how great they are. I took the stock ones off and got a set of 9dbi antenna's to replace them with. my neighbor that is about 90 feet up the street, can get a signal from me, and that is through 2 houses too. I am not saying a great signal, but a signal that connects is still a signal. that is with the new 9dbi antennas.. I did not check with the stock ones. It does not have annoying lights on the front, or really bright ones either, like a lot of devices seen to have these days. they lights that are on the front are easy to see, but also easy to ignore too.

The complaints that I do have with it is more in the software then on how good it works. These are some features that some other brands have had that this one does not. It requires a password, but no user name.. so that drops security to get into it in half right there. If you dont have to much to worry about, when it comes to people getting into the setup on yours, like if you have WEP or whatever security enabled, this will be less of an issue, but if you leave yours open, then this might be more of an issue.

What I do is set mine up for mac filtering, add the mac addresses of the devises I want to be able to connect, and then select, only let the devices in the mac address list to be able to connect wireless. This is one place that I dont like the setup. Even though it is easy to get into it to add them, there is no place to distinguish one device from the next. So say for example, you have a cell phone, and loose the cell phone, or break it, and have to get another, you may want to remove the mac listing from the list.. but how do you do it if you dont remember which mac address was for that device? or say you have a child, and you want them to get off the net, and they dont listen, or try to sneak on when grounded. Well, if you knew which mac address was theirs, you could just click to disable that one device.. but not having and description box for each mac make it harder to keep track of what device is for what mac address.

Next is there is no reboot. Granted, you really should not need to reboot it very often, but if for some reason you do want to, you have to manually pull the power plug to do it. I have had others that had a reboot feature in the software. There is no status up time on it either. If you wanted to see how long it has been on for some reason, you can not. This comes into play, say, it something starts glitching, and you want to see if the device and been rebooted, or rebooted itself for some reason, or... if you can see the up time, then you would know, but that is a small feature that is left out of the software. there is also no info about connections either. If someone has been connected to the router, there is no way to tell how much they have been on it, how much data they have downloaded, or anything else. the only thing that they have about any connection use, is they will tell you how much time left you have on your IP lease. which can tell you how long ago it was that you connected to the router. and there is the info on that page too, that tells what your computer name is. No other info is there for you to get any other info about you though. Like I said, very limited on information. My last router, i could tell how much a certain computer has used the internet, how much data was downloaded by them, and much more. this one just seems to lack all the details about things. Oh yea, and that DCHP info, about who has a lease on an IP address.. well that is under local network, not the wireless tab too.

In case you are wondering, there are times where I will leave my wireless open for neighbors that do not have internet. and when i do, as long as they dont abuse the privilege, I may leave it that way for a time. But, if I see that someone is constantly thrashing my network, it would be nice to know who is doing it. just by simply being able to see how much data they have used, I can tell who did it. There are other things too, so that is just one example. so yes, these features can come in handy too. Like I said, they just did not seem to think about putting in most features that are not needed features. I guess they consider those other features, a luxury.

All of the main, basic features are there though, like changing the speed that anyone can connect to it at, WEP, WPA, WPA2, etc security, the tons of little things that most people never touch, the ability of blocking both times, and services, or even URL's. Like I said, the basic stuff that most people dont use.

yea, i know, this is only wireless G, but for me, that is more then enough. Right now, I only have 20 meg down, and when time warner upgrades their service in my area, My plan will go up to 100 meg down, but when it comes down to it, for basic use, unless you are doing high end gaming, or doing things like torrents wirelessly, you really dont need faster then a 54meg connection to the internet. so it is not really a big deal. Even things like streaming services like netflix, only uses something like 4 meg down at best. at least that is the best setting that I can get that is available to me. that means you could have 10 people streaming video's at the same time, and still have much room to spare. Like I said, most average people do not need more then 54 meg down.

Setup was very easy, and you can do it, even from a factory hard reset, without any disks too. Just simply connect your computer to the router through an ethernet cord, go to your web browser, and type in the IP address of the router in the web browser, and make any changes. No need to use install software, so if you loose the install disk, it is not a big deal. There is descriptions for all the setting built right in, so no need to look things up, or look for manuals if you are trying to figure out what a setting does.. It is right there on the side. If it is not, then there is a "more" link that you can click that will open another web page for you to view that info in.

As for the antenna's, if you want to remove them, there is a plastic cap over the base of the antenna. Straighten the antenna for easier grip, then grab that plastic base, and just turn like you would a nut.. It will unscrew off, and if the antenna does not come off with it, then just unscrew the antenna too.

Overall, this is a good router, and seems well made. i hope it lasts me for years to come too. I just wish that it had more info about things. So would I recommend it.. yes.. as long as its limitations do not bother you. so far, it has been a good reliable little router.

--------------------------------------------------

Update.

I have found a little more info about this that I did not realize. First, you always hear that wireless G is up to 54Mb speeds, but what they do not advertise is this. First, that 54 is both way communication. So that means, you max out at 27Mb up, and 27Mb down. On top of that, that 27 is total, not just info. Meaning, overhead, security info, etc, is included in that 27. It is not just data. So the data speed will be closer to around 21 Mb speeds. and that is on a good connection. This is more then fine for someone with a low internet speed, someone just surfing the net, etc. But if you get 50Mb down internet speeds, don't expect to get the full use of it on this router. Mine started glitching out, so I just upgraded to an N router as I also upgraded my internet speeds too. Just don't forget, if you do upgrade your modem in aspects of higher speeds, you will also need to make sure that you have a wireless N adapter in your device too, or it will not improve your speeds any.
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