CNET editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Very good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 01/18/2005
- Released on: 12/01/2004
Setting up Buffalo's WZR-RSG54 wireless secure remote gateway to share an Internet connection is a simple plug-and-play affair. Depending on the complexity of your network, you can have multiple computers online within minutes. Unfortunately, configuring the VPN can be tricky. If you haven't set up a VPN before, plan on an hour of reading and mucking about on your computers. Fortunately, Buffalo does a good job of putting the information you need at your fingertips: the router comes with a 15-page VPN setup guide, which covers configuration settings for multiple versions of Windows, including Windows 98, Me, 2000, and XP.
As the product name suggests, the most distinguishing features of Buffalo's wireless secure remote gateway are its support for secure VPN connections and its ability to let you control your computers from a remote location. The router's encrypted VPN server lets you tunnel into your network from a remote location via the Internet, keeping hackers at bay and maintaining the safety of the data in your home or office. Once you've established a VPN connection with the gateway, you can use the included VNC software to control the computers on your network remotely. The VPN and remote-control capabilities are useful features for traveling professionals; they could save you money on subscriptions to services such as GoToMyPC.
Buffalo's wireless remote secure gateway touts Broadcom's AfterBurner technology, which claims to boost wireless throughput rates to 125Mbps. Unfortunately, the actual throughput of the AfterBurner solution is significantly lower. The integrated 802.11g access point in Buffalo's secure remote gateway is based on Broadcom's new high-speed chipset. Both Broadcom and Buffalo misleadingly advertise the component as capable of 125Mbps. In our tests, the actual throughput of the unit in a best case scenario was only 37.1Mbps--a little faster than Linksys's SpeedBooster router but slower than other high-speed routers we've tested. The range of Buffalo's wireless secure remote gateway was equally underwhelming: at 200 feet, where Belkin's Pre-N router was still kicking out 36.4Mbps, the WZR-RSG54 wireless secure remote gateway mustered only 4.1Mbps. Buffalo equips all of its routers with an external connector that you can use to attach an antenna to improve the device's range, but this adds to the total cost of your network. Additionally, the router's enhanced speeds work only if all of the products in the network are built around the same chipset. We view this feature as more of a marketing ploy than a long-term benefit to consumers.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Throughput in Mbps |
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