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Linksys WRT110 RangePlus Wireless Router

microsoft-windows,WRT110

<p><a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;wincert&period;net&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2015&sol;01&sol;microsoft-windows&period;jpg"><img class&equals;"alignnone size-full wp-image-517" src&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;wincert&period;net&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2015&sol;01&sol;microsoft-windows&period;jpg" alt&equals;"microsoft windows&comma;windows&comma;microsoft&comma;grayed&comma;network location type&comma;homegroup&comma;deployment&comma;java certificates&comma;accessing information&comma;multiple connections&comma;map network drive&comma;action center&comma;usb&comma;notepad&comma;error code&comma;integrity&comma;option&comma;page cannot&comma;ext3&comma;extension&comma;windows backup&comma;free space&comma;present devices" width&equals;"720" height&equals;"340" &sol;><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Linksys RangePlus Wireless WRT110 is not a Draft N router&comma; but Linksys doesn&&num;8217&semi;t call it a Wireless-G router&comma; either&period; The reason&quest; It works with both specifications&period; It supports the 802&period;11g standard&comma; but the company&&num;8217&semi;s RangePlus technology takes advantage of the throughput threshold of the draft 802&period;11n specification and offers improved speed when used with Draft N wireless clients&period; In testing&comma; the WRT110 delivered near N throughput on our mixed-mode benchmark&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We know of no other router that offers near N speed without being a Draft N router&period; It also provides more range than other 802&period;11g contenders do&period; Despite its lack of Gigabit Ethernet support and no USB ports&comma; the RangePlus Wireless WRT110 is a smart choice for networks where you have mix of 802&period;11g and Draft N wireless clients&period; We also like it for its sleek&comma; antenna-free design and low&comma; sub-&dollar;80 price&period; Though prices of some Draft N routers are not much more than &dollar;80&comma; we still want to recommend this router for its ease of use&comma; good range&comma; and interesting design&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><&excl;--more--><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Device type&colon; Wireless router<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Network standard&colon; Linksys proprietary RangePlus &lpar;works with wireless-G and wireless-N&rpar;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Bandwidth&colon; 2&period;4GHz<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> OSes supported&colon; Windows 2000&comma; XP&comma; Vista&comma; Mac OS X&comma; Linux<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Security options&colon; WEP 64&sol;128-bit&comma;WPA-PSK&comma; WPA2-PSK WPA-TKIP&comma; WPA-AES&comma; Wireless Protected Setup<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Features&colon; Four 10&sol;100 LAN ports&semi; one 10&sol;100Mbps WAN port&semi; DHCP support<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Notable design features&colon; Internal antenna design<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><span style&equals;"color&colon; &num;000000&semi;">•<&sol;span><&sol;strong> Support&colon; One-year warranty<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Design and ease of use<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;The RangePlus WRT110 looks a bit like a UFO &lpar;and no&comma; it can&&num;8217&semi;t fly&rpar;&period; Its flat case features a sloped top with rounded corners and an attractive dark blue color&period; What we like best about the router&&num;8217&semi;s design is the absence of external antennas&period; This is the first time we&&num;8217&semi;ve seen internal antenna design in a compact router&comma; making it truly compact&period; Other antenna-free routers&comma; such as the Netgear RangeMax WNR854T &comma; tend to be bulky&period; The flat plate-like design also makes it stay more grounded to the surface&comma; which is necessary for a device with such light weight&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The router&&num;8217&semi;s layout is simple and effective&period; On the back&comma; there are four 10&sol;100 LAN ports&comma; a WAN port&comma; the reset button&comma; and the power plug&period; On top&comma; toward the front&comma; you&&num;8217&semi;ll find the LED indicators that show the status of the ports&comma; the wireless connection&comma; and the connection to the Internet as well as the power&period; In the middle of those LEDs is the button to initiate Wi-Fi Protected Setup&period; WPS is a feature that allows for quickly adding a WPS-enabled client to the wireless network without having to manually type in the encryption key&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On the downside&comma; the WT110 doesn&&num;8217&semi;t have a USB port&period; This means it doesn&&num;8217&semi;t support any USB-related features such as print serving&comma; network storage&comma; or Windows Connect Now&comma; which lets you transfer the wireless encryption key using a thumbdrive&period; It also doesn&&num;8217&semi;t support Gigabit Ethernet&comma; which is disappointing but not surprising considering its low price&period; Also&comma; the sleek casing&comma; while very nice looking&comma; tends to retain dust and fingerprints&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The router is easy to set up&comma; whether you use the well-organized Web interface or the bundled Linksys EasyLink Advisor software&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Features<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;The WRT110 comes with Linksys&&num;8217&semi; new wireless enhancing technology called RangePlus&comma; which is the successor of the company&&num;8217&semi;s SpeedBooster&period; &lpar;Other vendors have similar technology&&num;8211&semi;Netgear with RangeMax and D-Link with SpeedBooster&period;&rpar; The main difference is that RangeMax and SpeedBooster work only with proprietary adapters to offer potential gain in throughput and range&comma; while RangePlus works with any 802&period;11n-compatible wireless adapter&period; This means that any PC or laptop with an 802&period;11n wireless adapter will enjoy near 802&period;11n throughput speed with the WRT110&&num;8211&semi;you won&&num;8217&semi;t need to purchase a separate adapter from Linksys&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The WRT110 uses similar Web interface to previous models&comma; but we noticed improved responsiveness and a few new features including an Application and Gaming tab that allows for setting up ports to support special applications and network services&period; The WRT110 also supports all available wireless encryption from WEP to WPA and WPA2&comma; as well as Remote Authentication Dial In User Service&period; As with most other routers from Linksys&comma; the WRT110 supports VPN pass-through and access restriction&period; It is also the first budget router from Linksys that offers Wi-Fi Protected Setup&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Performance<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;We stopped testing 802&period;11b and &period;11g routers &lpar;basically&comma; any non-Draft N router&rpar; at the beginning of the year&comma; but we made an exception for this WRT110 because of its promise to deliver near Draft N throughput&period; We tested the Linksys RangePlus WRT110 the same way we test Wireless-N routers&period; Considering this is a predetermined unfair comparison&comma; the WRT110 did very well&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On our max throughput test&comma; at 46&period;2Mbps&comma; the WRT110 trailed behind recent Draft N routers we&&num;8217&semi;ve tested by 40 percent to 46 percent&period; It was even a little slower than the pokey LevelOne WBR-6000 N-One&period; In mixed mode testing&comma; however&comma; where the router is forced to work with multiple wireless standards&comma; the WRT110 saw only a slight dip in throughput to 41&period;3Mbps&comma; which far exceeded the LevelOne N-One&&num;8217&semi;s score of 23&period;9Mbps and trailed only slightly behind Draft N routers from SMC and D-Link&period; At 68Mbps&comma; the Edimax BR-6504N is still the mixed mode speed king&comma; and came very close to the rest of the Draft N routers&period; It did even better in range test registering 14&period;5Mbps&comma; which is impressively faster than the Edimax BR-6504N nMax&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It&&num;8217&semi;s worth noting that the WRT110&&num;8217&semi;s performance&&num;8211&semi;when compared with that of older 802&period;11g routers we&&num;8217&semi;ve tested&&num;8211&semi;is excellent and roughly twice as fast as the fastest ones&comma; such as the Netgear WGR614&period; On average&comma; 802&period;11g routers scored roughly 20Mbps and 8Mbps on our max throughput and mixed-mode tests&comma; respectively&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The WRT110 offers excellent range&&num;8211&semi;on par with Draft N adapters&period; We were able to get its signal from more than 250 feet away&period; The range reduced with Wireless-G adapters&comma; we never got a signal at more than 190 feet&period; Our testing environment is not range-optimized&comma; so in real life the WRT110 may offer better range&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Source&colon; <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;reviews&period;cnet&period;com&sol;routers&sol;linksys-wrt110-rangeplus-wireless&sol;4505-3319&lowbar;7-32936970&period;html&quest;tag&equals;viddet" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank">cnet<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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