• more about

    #80211g

    Which Flavor of Wi-Fi Do You Use?

    Planex GW-USMicronN: A Teeny, Tiny Wireless-N Adapter

    Vudu Finally Gets Wireless Kit (Works Fine, Expensive by Competitive Measures)

    read more: #wireless, #80211g, #80211n, #buffalo, #high, #router, #gain

    Buffalo Brings High Gain to 802.11G and N

    Buffalo's two latest high gain routers bring the answer of three antennas to the question of "How do I get more range on my wireless router?" Their WZR2-G300N 802.11N router has the standard features just about all routers have, including an external switch to flip between router and access point modes, in case you've already purchased a router with Gigabit Ethernet (this one doesn't have it) and want to use this only for your wireless needs.

    In 802.11g news, the WHR-G125 also has that flip switch, but comes with only one antenna and 10/100 wired networking. These two are on the low end of the router spectrum, offering bare bones features at a bare bones price ($99 for the N, and $49 for the G). If all you need to do is get on the Internet, then Buffalo's got you covered.

    Press Release [Buffalo]


    Contact information for this author is not available.