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« Certified Draft N Devices Don't Have To Play Nice | Main | Apple Turns Up Speed on Revised AirPort Extreme Base Station »
Most Wi-Fi routers look roughly the same as all others: There’s some different plastic molding, an occasional set of panel icons or LCD micro-displays with information, some styling. Belkin has introduced some different, and for a purpose: The N1 Vision. A router stands up with antennas popping out the top, and it has a large LCD display with information that you’d otherwise have to connect to the router to retrieve—if the router offered that information at all. The display has a four-direction toggle switch and an OK button to page through information that includes downstream and upstream data rates, connected users, and the date and time. At $200, it’s an expensive 2.4 GHz Draft N router, except that it includes a four-port gigabit Ethernet switch. It’s due out later this month.
Posted by Glennf at July 11, 2007 1:33 PM
Categories: Draft N, Gateways, Gigabit Ethernet
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