| Buffalo Airstation N-finiti Wireless-N Router & Access Point |

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Model: WZR-G300N
Brand: Buffalo
Manufacturer: BUFFALO
Average Rating:
(submit your review here)
Total Reviews: 2
Operating system: Microsoft Windows 2000
Form factor: External
Hardware platform: PC
Data link protocol: Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, IEEE 802.11n (draft), IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g
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| Features: |
High-Speed multimedia streaming or online gaming Easy Setup with AirStation One-Touch Secure System (AOSS) WPA-PSK (AES) and 128/64-bit WEP security Smart Router feature detects and sets up your cable or DSL Internet connection Simple Web browser configuration |
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| Description: |
| Buffalo Technology's WZRG-300N Airstation N-Finiti Wireless Router and Access Point is a great solution for multimedia streaming. It offers the ultimate range at blazing fast speeds for your wireless network. Exceed wireless limits and enjoy the freedom of high-speed media streaming - wirelessly! In addition to best range and performance, the AirStation One-Touch Secure System (AOSS) allows you to set up a high-speed secure wireless network within minutes. With 10/100 switch, you can add up to 4 LAN connections. Designed to draft IEEE802.11n standard 1.0 specifications to deliver ultimate connectivity for your wireless world. External button switches between Router or Access Point nodes Includes NAT/SPI firewall and intrusion detector Built-in DHCP server Built-in 4-port 10/100 auto-sensing switch Optimized high-speed routing -- up to 10X faster than standard routers Works seamlessly with Nintendo DS Wi-Fi connection Designed to draft IEEE802.11n standard 1.0 specifications |
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| User Reviews (2 total): |
Page 1 of Total 1 Pages
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Excellent 802.11n Wireless Bridge, October 6, 2007
By user (San Jose, CA)
I bought two of these to create an 802.11n bridge. They work perfectly. I benchmarked end-to-end file transfer throughput at 21Mbps with 128-bit WEP over a distance of 50 feet with an intervening wall, using two wired devices connected to each end of the bridge, running NetBIOS over TCP/IP. That's about 30% faster than I achieved using "turbo" 802.11g over the same distance with the same test. (802.11n "raw" data rates do not reflect achievable point-to-point transfer bandwidth). Even better, both devices double as synchronized access points while bridging. But wireless clients that connect to the secondary access point do experience some additional latency. No problems with DHCP. However, I'm using the primary in access point mode rather than router mode, so the bridge is just passing DHCP through. The bridge-access-point combination also supports 802.11g clients well, including framebursting mode.
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Could be a lot better, April 24, 2007
By user (Grand Junction, CO)
I got this product because I've heard good things about buffalo, and wanted something that would last, such as the draft-n. The problem being the wireless on this router would time out, and the router would need to be power cycled every few hours, nearly worthless as an access point out of the box. Tech support stopped responding to E-mails after we moved past "have you tried firmware update" and "have you tried mac address cloning" after that they wouldn't even respond. Eventually I figured out that their DHCP support is broken, and by cutting lease times down to a short period like 1-2 hours, the wireless would stay up. Strangeness. After fixing that it works okay, range is pretty pathetic.
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