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"A letter to Netgear" on by Richinsd
Pros: Adequate features and good reliability
Cons: Very poor tech support
Summary: To whom this should concern,
As I look around my server room and count numerous Netgear products, I'm sad to say that as much as I feel your products are good quality, these will positively be my last purchases from your company. Your policy of extorting personal information from your customers by refusing support unless personal information is provided is absolutely reprehensible. If, as a corporation you feel that filling your mailing list is more important than serving your paying customers, then I will under no circumstances continue to serve you with my dollars.
Let me understand this train of thought. I purchase devices from your company to secure my privacy, yet you feel I should relinquish my privacy as a requirement to receive support on a product I've paid for. Not in this lifetime! How arrogant? Someone over there must be prepping for a career in politics. Every company touts the same story, "We Don't Sell Your Personal Information". You know as well as I, that many do exactly that. Registration information is a huge market. Our information is sold in direct conflict with Privacy Statements every day. After all, who's to know? Certainly not the consumer! We, of course are left to pay the price with annoying spam and junk mail or worse. Since as a consumer I have no control over this information once it has been transmitted, the only safe course of action for me is no action. KEEP IT PRIVATE! This is a rule to which I strictly adhere and I'm pleased to say that after 20 years in the computer industry my tech related junk mail is ZERO. I've performed my part and paid for your product. What gives Netgear the right to my personal information? Are you that out of touch with privacy issues today?
So Here it is. You value my name, address, and phone number. Like many others, I value my privacy enough to include it in my daily purchasing decisons as should all of us. I hold posession of my finances and as a consequence your router has gone back to the retailer and has been exchanged for a Linksys of similar features and price. I'm happy to say that my support questions to them were answered without incident and I'm more than pleased with that purchase and the service which followed.
Finally, let me be up front. This letter will be cross posted to every relevent usenet tech forum, not as a flame but as a pre-sale public service notice. If you don't wish to give up your privacy, don't purchase Netgear. Those who feel as I do may be spared the lost hours of a second trip to the store for refund or exchange. If only a small percentage of the thousands of people who will read this document walk up to a person in a store holding a netgear box and relay these concerns, maybe you'll get the message. You spent good money in marketing to bring us to your products. It's a shame to waste it with policies that serve little purpose but to alienate us as consumers.
Sincerely
Richard S Fay
Former Netgear Customer -
"Great router, but only if u can take steps to stop the overheating reboot." on by weezguy
Pros: A B and G all in one box, simple to setup
Cons: Overheating results in resetting box
Summary: I have decent tech skills, but not a LAN admin so I dont need the advanced features. I mainly got this for the A band, because I live in an apt, and dont need range, PLUS I figure 99% of people won't be looking in this range to hack or have cordless phone inteference.
It was pretty easy to setup. I was up and running in 20 minutes. The only problem was like every 2 days, I would lose connectivity and have to restart the router. Then I read somewhere on NetGear's forums, about some guy that cut a hole on top of the router and put a fan there. Whoa.
I've had 2 Linksys routers die on me, and one netgear die too. So it got me thinking. Maybe it is the overheating? So I unscrewed the cover off the router and am now just running the router w/o the case. Kinda makes me look like a geek when people come over. But guess what? It doens't freeze anymore.
Although this is pretty severe step, I am happy. If I got another Linksys router, I would have to do this anyway since it was probably the same reason the Linksys ones died after a couple of months. Plus the netgear seems to be a cleaner running router. and now, no problems -
"Excellent router" on by roadbusinessguy
Pros: setup, transmitter, coverage, performance in all bands and menu options
Cons: None to think of (1 suggestion)
Summary: This router is excellent. Setup was extremely easy, It was as if a user built the menu interface. Just fall through the menu's and you'll be done before you know it. Signal coverage is especially broad in both bands. This is a very fast router, especially in SUPER Modes. I use the Super"A" band and my wife uses "G". Netgear uses the Atheros chip set which explains why these routers are so stable and reliable. I would ask Netgear to mature their new MIMO gear towards the dual bands as well. Netgear would continue to outperform in that marketplace, if they also read the needs of the many.
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"Not a bad router" on by kev52
Pros: Very efficient wireless networking.
Cons: dropped connection a couple of times.
Summary: Overall, I have had a good experience with my WGU624. I have used it for VOIP and home networking and it works great. Except for one thing-It sometimes dropps connections. I read up on it and found on a Netgear Support Forum, that it was a heating issue. http://forum1.netgear.com/support/viewtopic.php?t=4435 I have considered voiding my warrenty and putting a fan on it. Other than that this router is great and the overall quality is good.
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"Everything I was looking for..." on
Pros: Nat is good, SPI is great. I brought one for business network I put together. Locked down some popups and common words... Xtra COOL!!! Security is TIGH, I lock down everything. Talking bang for your buck. I bought another for my SOHO. Both have been up
Cons: None, both have never have had a problem.
