MSRP: $86.05
See manufacturer website for availability.
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The Wireless MaxG router is housed in a silver-and-gray plastic casing that helps it blend into the technological woodwork. The device includes the typical four Ethernet jacks on its rear edge, along with one USB 2.0 port for connecting a printer. That edge also has the standard adjustable antenna found on most routers. The antenna's flexibility helps you maximize your signal strength. We wish the router also included brackets for mounting it high on a wall where it would experience less signal interference. Along the front edge, five status lights corresponding to the Ethernet jacks and the USB port lie next to three more lights that indicate when the router is drawing AC power, when its wireless radio is functioning properly, and when wireless clients are accessing the network.
Thankfully, the Wireless MaxG router's setup and user guides are more thorough than those of its wireless-adapter counterpart, the Wireless MaxG PC Card. The installation guide incorporates useful diagrams for plugging in the requisite hardware, as well as handy screenshots that take you through important initial configuration procedures for both the router and a printer. These include choosing an SSID, establishing a WPA password, and directing Windows to recognize your networked printer.
The installation guide is also included as a section within the extended user guide, which goes into greater detail about how to alter the Wireless MaxG router's features using its browser-based configuration tool. In addition to WPA, the device secures your data transmissions through WEP keys and 802.1x authentication via a RADIUS server. You can also use the tool to specify whether the router should block or accept particular MAC addresses, send incoming traffic only to certain computers (known as port forwarding), place a certain computer in the DMZ, or function as a network bridge.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)