Router replacement

Mine is wired D-Link DGL-4100 router (Gigabit ethernet for gaming - 10/100/1000 Mbps). It runs fine. I believe that most wired gaming routers are better than 10/100 Mbps router.

ZVRS does a good job that will help to configure your computer's router thru the internet.
 
I have DIR-655, it works perfectly with all of the devices including my MacBook Pro and PS3.

Apple Extreme Rocks!!! Faster speed and great range than DIR-655 and other DLink router. Easy to set up from iPhone or iPad. No dropped connecting. Videophone was not choppy and pixel. I will got Motorola cable modem 3.0 (30/5 MBPS TWC) soon to be requesting download HD movie streaming.
 
I stop plan dual N, I am suprise new 801.11ac (Gigabit) will come summer.. I am lucky I stop last nov, I did not buy dual N whew!
 
I stop plan dual N, I am suprise new 801.11ac (Gigabit) will come summer.. I am lucky I stop last nov, I did not buy dual N whew!

That's BS.

Five years have passed since the first 802.11n devices implementing a draft of the now-finalized specification hit the market. Over the years 802.11n support has become ubiquitous in the industry. Everything from smartphones to high-end notebooks support the standard. Even low cost products like the $99 Apple TV or $49 Roku LT ship with 802.11n support. With real world transfer speeds ranging from 30Mbps at the low end to 150Mbps at the high end, 802.11n is simply too slow to quickly move large files. It wasn't too long ago that 100MB/s was reserved for high-end hard drives in PCs. Today, with SSDs capable of sustaining transfers of over 500MB/s, the bottleneck in many wireless homes is increasingly becoming WiFi.

The IEEE has been working on the specification for the fifth generation of WiFi: 802.11ac. Today that spec is in its draft stages and is expected to be finalized by the end of 2012 or beginning of 2013. The first 802.11ac chipsets have already been announced by Broadcom, with the first devices (routers, USB dongles, PCIe cards and OEM systems) shipping very shortly. Broadcom expects that the final version of the 802.11ac spec will be only marginally different from the current draft and any changes it expects to be able to address in software.

AnandTech - 5th Generation WiFi: 802.11ac, "Gigabit" WiFi Primer
 
I stop plan dual N, I am suprise new 801.11ac (Gigabit) will come summer.. I am lucky I stop last nov, I did not buy dual N whew!

If I were you, I wouldnt buy it yet. let other geeks buy them and work out the bugs in real world. By the time its worked out, there will be others jumping on bandwagon and offering OTHER features not offered this summer.

SO what say you?:cool2:
 
yeah, thank you that I block FOXRAC, he not understand me all time..

yes Broadcom chipset 802.11ac since Nov 2011

Whatever, your block will override by third party post but who cares.
 
Wirelessly posted

DUDE. That's one fast WiFi standard. I took a read on the Wikipedia, saying that it can transfer at closely the same speed as SATA III 6.0 Gb/s (600 megabytes per seconds). And, the manufacturers can choose to release the 802.11ac Ethernet chipset and the entire hardware early, which can be either this summer or falls - that way it gives the linux hackers / developers the opportunity to discover any of the firmware bugs before 2013, for which the specification is to be finalized. You can buy it early if you want, but be ready for any bugs that pops up without any warnings - the Tomato router firmware can be given a try, if you know how to program and have the datasheet ready. I am interested in this WiFi specification now, clearly full of promises.
 
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