Anyone know where to get a decent wireless router that's on the fairly inexpensive side?
Really, at most I'll probably be 15 feet away from the router when I'm using it. If even that.
I don't, but I can say that the people who work the telephones at Linksys are very nice when you completely screw up your router on a Sunday night.
Quote from: Alice on April 16, 2007, 11:33:59 AM
Anyone know where to get a decent wireless router that's on the fairly inexpensive side?
Really, at most I'll probably be 15 feet away from the router when I'm using it. If even that.
Cable is cheap.
I need to get one too, so if you find a cheap one, let me know.
Decent does not usually equal in expensive.
When I set mine up, it cost, with cable, a bit over a hundred if memory serves.
Distance from router is only part of the issue. Protecting your wireless from other network leeches is also important, lest they steal your bandwidth.
Quote from: Bennyhana on April 16, 2007, 11:45:58 AM
Quote from: Alice on April 16, 2007, 11:33:59 AM
Anyone know where to get a decent wireless router that's on the fairly inexpensive side?
Really, at most I'll probably be 15 feet away from the router when I'm using it. If even that.
Cable is cheap.
Having a dog with a gimpy leg that gets caught up in cable and pulls your computer off of things, causing them to fall to the floor and break - is not cheap. I
need wireless.
(http://images.monoprice.com/productmediumimages/1401.jpg)
25 ft. range, $3.92, run it along the wall or under the carpet to avoid dog-leg issues
http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=102&cp_id=10208&cs_id=1020801&p_id=140&seq=1&format=2&style=
Quote from: nallen on April 16, 2007, 12:01:28 PM
(http://images.monoprice.com/productmediumimages/1401.jpg)
25 ft. range, $3.92, run it along the wall or under the carpet to avoid dog-leg issues
http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=102&cp_id=10208&cs_id=1020801&p_id=140&seq=1&format=2&style=
Its for my work laptop.
I think this is the model that was recommended to me, for $50
http://www.buy.com/prod/linksys-wireless-g-broadband-router-wrt54g/q/loc/101/10336386.html
Quote from: Jessie on April 16, 2007, 12:07:56 PM
I think this is the model that was recommended to me, for $50
http://www.buy.com/prod/linksys-wireless-g-broadband-router-wrt54g/q/loc/101/10336386.html
That's what I have. And if you jack it all up on a random Sunday night, the nice Indian man will fix it for you.
For the record, I don't need wireless at all, but I really like kicking back in my bed and watching tv while chatting/writing/surfing. It's nice! When I have some extra cash, I'll get a wireless router.
Does your laptop have a 802.11b/g card? I guessing it does. Go with g if you're tired of shitty performance (I was skeptical until I switched my router out, it's a huge difference is signal strength and reliability.) Ignore n and draft-n, it's unnecessary.
Linksys gets a lot of flak for folks, but the truth is they have known weaknesses (none of which apply to you), and lots of support.
~$50
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=628108&CatId=373
A bit cheaper, but more prone to issues of interoperability:
~$30
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=578283&NoMapp=1
What's b/g?
Quote from: Alice on April 16, 2007, 12:22:31 PM
What's b/g?
802.11b vs 802.11g
They are different wireless specs, b gives a transfer rate of ~10Mbits/sec, whereas g gives 54 Mbits/sec, is actual data speed this is about 8 kb/s for b and 43.2 kb/s for g. Reality is you'll get closer to 5 for b and probably 30 for g. That's at a good signal strength level, if there are problems, expect b to drop to ~1-2kb/s and g to 10 kb/s. The difference here is big, since the b gives noticeable lag on web surfing, while the g will not.
Quote from: nallen on April 16, 2007, 12:34:10 PM
Quote from: Alice on April 16, 2007, 12:22:31 PM
What's b/g?
802.11b vs 802.11g
They are different wireless specs, b gives a transfer rate of ~10Mbits/sec, whereas g gives 54 Mbits/sec, is actual data speed this is about 8 kb/s for b and 43.2 kb/s for g. Reality is you'll get closer to 5 for b and probably 30 for g. That's at a good signal strength level, if there are problems, expect b to drop to ~1-2kb/s and g to 10 kb/s. The difference here is big, since the b gives noticeable lag on web surfing, while the g will not.
However, you want a router that is backwards compatible to b, because there are some pieces of hardware (streaming music devices, etc.) that only do b.
Do what the rest of do.
Hire chinese kids to memorize binary and run the back and forth between your laptop and your cable modem.
Quote from: Bishamonten on April 16, 2007, 12:50:49 PM
Do what the rest of do.
Hire chinese kids to memorize binary and run the back and forth between your laptop and your cable modem.
But then, for the love of God, hide your coke.
Quote from: Bennyhana on April 16, 2007, 12:53:19 PM
Quote from: Bishamonten on April 16, 2007, 12:50:49 PM
Do what the rest of do.
Hire chinese kids to memorize binary and run the back and forth between your laptop and your cable modem.
But then, for the love of God, hide your coke.
If you pay them in coke, they work longer and faster.
I'd agree with the suggestions for linksys models in the $50 range.
Quote from: nallen on April 16, 2007, 12:34:10 PM
802.11b vs 802.11g
They are different wireless specs, b gives a transfer rate of ~10Mbits/sec, whereas g gives 54 Mbits/sec, is actual data speed this is about 8 kb/s for b and 43.2 kb/s for g. Reality is you'll get closer to 5 for b and probably 30 for g. That's at a good signal strength level, if there are problems, expect b to drop to ~1-2kb/s and g to 10 kb/s. The difference here is big, since the b gives noticeable lag on web surfing, while the g will not.
who the hell is this guy?
also -
802.11b - full speed 1.2 megabytes/sec
802.11a/g - full speed 6.7 megabytes/sec
802.11b is totally adequate for setting up mom or grandma. It's not an issue of lag though, just bandwidth. If you are in a dense apartment area with many wireless networks, you are going to see performance issues, which is probably where nate's experience is coming from. There are 12 channels available for wireless networks but they overlap so you can only have 3 or 4 networks in the same airspace before you start crowding other signals out.
Here's a handy dandy table, stolen from Wikipedia of course (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11):
Protocol Release Date Data Rate (Typ) Data Rate (Max) Range (Indoor) Range (Outdoor)
802.11a 1999 25 Mb/s 54 Mb/s ~25 meters ~75 meters
802.11b 1999 5.5 Mb/s 11 Mb/s ~35 meters ~100 meters
802.11g 2003 25 Mb/s 54 Mb/s ~25 meters ~75 meters
802.11n 2007 200 Mb/s 540 Mb/s ~50 meters ~126 meters
It's important to know that the numbers are given in bits (b), not bytes(B), it take 8 bits to make one byte. The rate is almost an order of magnitude less, 5.5 Mb/s = 0.68 MB/s, and 25 Mb = 3.125 MB/s
Another important thing to keep in mind is that 802.11b and 802.11g operate in the 2.4 Ghz spectrum. This is the same radio frequency that most portable phones use. Also, microwave ovens can often interfere with this spectrum.
802.11a is faster than 802.11b (even though it is lower in the alphabet) and works on the less crowded 5.4 Ghz frequency.
If your laptops supports it, and the price isn't too much, I would recommend going with the 802.11a if you are in an apartment building. Otherwise go with 802.11g and hope that you don't lose connection when you make some popcorn or are talking on a call with a portable phone.
How do I know if my laptop supports it?
Get two tin caps. Put a string on one and tie it to the cable modem. Put a string on the other one and tie it to the PC.
make sure the cans are facing each other.
Quote from: Alice on April 16, 2007, 02:51:26 PM
How do I know if my laptop supports it?
what is the make/model of your laptop? Anything made in the past 2 years should support both B and G
Dell Inspiron 9400
I bought my router from Newegg.com. They usually have awesome rebates on wireless gear. Mine's a D-Link and it's been awesome, but a lot of people don't like them.
Dell's site says you have a 1420 wireless, which supports both B and G
Quote from: swolt on April 16, 2007, 03:15:49 PM
Dell's site says you have a 1420 wireless, which supports both B and G
Thanks!
I know jack about hardware stuff.
I have had problems with D-Link and do not recommend them.
The router Jessie linked is the one I like. As Gamp said Linksys has great tech support. You might pay a few extra bucks but in the long run I think it's worth it.
Quote from: swolt on April 16, 2007, 03:16:37 PM
I have had problems with D-Link and do not recommend them.
The router Jessie linked is the one I like. As Gamp said Linksys has great tech support. You might pay a few extra bucks but in the long run I think it's worth it.
You're probably right. D-Link isn't exactly the easiest to configure. I've always had bad luck with Linksys. Seems like any brand you go it's a crap shoot.
Since I'm getting a new desktop, and I have two working laptops (thanks to swolt and Carroll), I'm thinking that I need to break down and get a wireless router.
Does this look like a decent deal?
http://www.stootsi.com/store/item.aspx?item=68060600
I don't ever use the printers that I have, so it may actually be more than I need.
I know next to nothing about networking. Will I be able to set up a network myself?
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 11:18:27 AM
Since I'm getting a new desktop, and I have two working laptops (thanks to swolt and Carroll), I'm thinking that I need to break down and get a wireless router.
Does this look like a decent deal?
http://www.stootsi.com/store/item.aspx?item=68060600
I don't ever use the printers that I have, so it may actually be more than I need.
I know next to nothing about networking. Will I be able to set up a network myself?
It doesn't look like that's actually a wireless router. It looks like that just hooks up printers and computers via ethernet to your existing wireless network. I could be wrong.
that isn't a router, just a hub.
wireless networking is pretty easy, you should be able to do it yourself.
Quote from: Bennyhana on January 07, 2008, 11:21:40 AM
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 11:18:27 AM
Since I'm getting a new desktop, and I have two working laptops (thanks to swolt and Carroll), I'm thinking that I need to break down and get a wireless router.
Does this look like a decent deal?
http://www.stootsi.com/store/item.aspx?item=68060600
I don't ever use the printers that I have, so it may actually be more than I need.
I know next to nothing about networking. Will I be able to set up a network myself?
It doesn't look like that's actually a wireless router. It looks like that just hooks up printers and computers via ethernet to your existing wireless network. I could be wrong.
I thought that's what this meant:
Connect multiple PCs: This server makes it possible to connect a cluster of computers, easily and cost-effectively. You can connect up to four PCs to your wireless network without adding any new adapters.
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 11:22:30 AM
Quote from: Bennyhana on January 07, 2008, 11:21:40 AM
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 11:18:27 AM
Since I'm getting a new desktop, and I have two working laptops (thanks to swolt and Carroll), I'm thinking that I need to break down and get a wireless router.
Does this look like a decent deal?
http://www.stootsi.com/store/item.aspx?item=68060600
I don't ever use the printers that I have, so it may actually be more than I need.
I know next to nothing about networking. Will I be able to set up a network myself?
It doesn't look like that's actually a wireless router. It looks like that just hooks up printers and computers via ethernet to your existing wireless network. I could be wrong.
I thought that's what this meant:
Connect multiple PCs: This server makes it possible to connect a cluster of computers, easily and cost-effectively. You can connect up to four PCs to your wireless network without adding any new adapters.
I think that means that you can physically plug 4 computers into it, and they'll be connected to your existing wireless network.
Oh. Eff a bunch of that. I have two insane cats and a hyper 11 year old boy in my house. The last thing I need is more wires running everywhere.
Linksys WRT54G has seen plenty of testing and abuse and is still recommended, though I did just have one new from Amazon completely die after 2 weeks. :P
Youph just got a Belkin Wireless-G router from Best Buy that seems to be working well, and after my Linksys died, I ran to Best Buy and found the Dynex Wireless-G router in a separate aisle. Dynex's wireless parts are all the same as Belkin's - This router had a different piece of plastic on top, Dynex instead of Belkin branding, and a price tag $10 cheaper.
I'm buying an old used Linksys from Amazon for $10. If it works well enough for me to sit on my bed and talk on AIM, that's good enough for me.
For 10 dollars and a warm poptart you can yell at me anywhere in the house and I'll type what you say.
Quote from: DownSouth on January 07, 2008, 02:18:12 PM
For 10 dollars and a warm poptart you can yell at me anywhere in the house and I'll type what you say.
What can I get for $5 and a toaster strudel?
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 02:24:17 PM
Quote from: DownSouth on January 07, 2008, 02:18:12 PM
For 10 dollars and a warm poptart you can yell at me anywhere in the house and I'll type what you say.
What can I get for $5 and a toaster strudel?
Catchr speak and I get to crap in the bushes.
Quote from: DownSouth on January 07, 2008, 02:33:32 PM
Quote from: Jessie on January 07, 2008, 02:24:17 PM
Quote from: DownSouth on January 07, 2008, 02:18:12 PM
For 10 dollars and a warm poptart you can yell at me anywhere in the house and I'll type what you say.
What can I get for $5 and a toaster strudel?
Catchr speak and I get to crap in the bushes.
Bwahahaha!
I just successfully set up my first wireless network. Go me! It's secure and everything.
I could hack it.
Quote from: BigDun on January 11, 2008, 10:23:44 PM
I could hack it.
Yeah, right. Sure you could. You couldn't even get mine to work, nevermind hacking anything. You hack.
;)