Netgear backs the WPN511 with a standard one-year warranty. Convenient 24/7, toll-free tech support lasts for the length of the warranty, though access to the company's support Web site is always free ...
Although Linux has traditionally had a reputation for shaky support of wireless networking, this is largely a thing of the past. Modern versions of Linux, such as the Ubuntu distribution, support most ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Wireless warriors confused by todays 802.11 standards have ...
NETGEAR also introduced the NETGEAR Double 108 Mbps Wireless PC Card (WG511U), which can be used in conjunction with its new router. The NETGEAR router not only provides consumers with market-leading ...
I have a Netgear WGR614 wireless router, and a netgear wireless card in my laptop (both 802.11g), and I have this strange problem of the card losing connection to the router and not being able to ...
With its repeater functionality, this device might be handy as a second router or a repeater in a large office, but mediocre throughput makes it hard to recommend the Netgear WNR3500 enthusiastically ...
With summer in the air, the idea of sitting in the garden working on a laptop is far more attractive than that of battling to work on public transport or through traffic jams. With summer in the air, ...
If you bought your new 802.11g wireless local area network (WLAN) devices thinking that they would represent the pinnacle of performance for a while, it seems “a while” may have just ended. Enter the ...
The Netgear WNR854T is the fastest of the draft-n routers so far—and it has some great extras, such as a gigabit switch—but it still disappoints at long range. I got a big surprise when I unpacked the ...
This router offers an easy-to-use management interface and decent performance that holds up at long distances, but it comes with few extras. Performs well at long distances. Good setup interface. Poor ...
A vulnerability has been identified in the device driver for the NetGear WG111v2, a $49.95 wireless USB adapter, that could allow a remote attacker to gain complete control over a vulnerable PC, ...