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[personal profile] ceagle
A lil while back, I wrote up a quick comparison of Printers, in the interest of generating helpful dialogue for people looking at such teengs, and so here is a similar quick chat about network Routers..

Any of these certainly work from time to time, but from what I've used, this is my take on 'em, from worst to best in reliability:

NetGear - This make has been the least reliable in my experience, often failing to sync and play nice with many modems and sometimes even just randomly dropping its duties on a circuit completely unless it gets power-cycled.

Belkin - I'd like to say this one is better than it is, but I can't. They have been known to have made pretty good cabling over the years, but the brand may be weakening. I've seen these mostly have difficulty staying connected for extended periods of time, and one I saw have issues right out of the box, losing connections every few minutes. Unlike the NetGear which would need a manual reboot, this brand will reconnect by itself, but it's mighty annoying, and my customer never saw the issue corrected until we finally just got a new router (different brand).

LinkSys - These are fairly decent, but somewhat sensitive (like the above ones) to heat, so they can fail if allowed to overheat in warm locations.

D-Link - I've had the highest success rate from this make, and though they can also have a bit of sensitivity to heat, it seems a bit less of a problem than with the LinkSys.

There are also other off-brands I'd rate, like the Dynex home brand of Best Buy, which is actually pretty darn tootin' good, but the above are the main four you are likely to see in stores as far as I know.

Any other thoughts or personal experiences with these contraptions? :>

Date: 2011-10-09 04:27 am (UTC)
ext_56720: (comments)
From: [identity profile] mortonfox.livejournal.com
It's the newer low-profile Linksys routers that tend to have heat problems. I put my E1000 on a small pot stand and that seems to keep it from overheating.

Date: 2011-10-09 04:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orv.livejournal.com
One other note about the Linksys ones is they seem to suffer from a lot of firmware bugs...newer firmwares are sometimes buggier than old ones, so I tend not to upgrade unless I'm trying to fix a specific problem.

For people who like to tinker, the DD-WRT third-party firmware for Linksys routers is quite good.

Date: 2011-10-09 04:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] telbert.livejournal.com
I have an older-model LinkSys Wireless-G Router. It serves me well, but once in a while, I need to unplug and replug it to hand it a new set of brains ;)

Date: 2011-10-09 08:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] atkelar.livejournal.com
Hmmm... can't really say I have much experience in that field, but my NetGear switch and wifi hotspot have not made much troubles... the hotspot is a bit wonky in accepting new devices but once they get to know each other it usually works just fine. I have them up 24/7.

Date: 2011-10-12 03:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] genecatlow.livejournal.com
D-Link makes some reliable routers. I've also had some good luck with 3Com in the past ^_^
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