Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
- Wireless-N technology delivers exceptional range
- “Dual Band” has more channels less interference
- Works with older Wireless-G and newest Wireless-
- “Push &apost;N&apost; Connect” wirelessly connec
- No need to remember your security password
Netgear RangeMax Dual Band WirelessN Router WNDR3300100UKS Networks Wireless Routers
Rating:
(out of 6 reviews)
Price: £82.99


Review by Mr. Davd C. Leigh for Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Rating:
Have a Netgear router at home which works well; this was for the office. What a nightmare – tried for two days to set it up all to no avail. Kept indicating that it was connected to the internet, but no actual connection. Did eveything that the manual said, but just more frustration. BTW gave it one star by mistake and can’t remove it!
Review by C. Lawrence for Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Rating:
Fast delivery, now able to connect to internet on playstation and interent all over the house
Review by Trev for Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Rating:
I found this realy easy to setup, works fantasticly with vista and I get my full bandwdth through it, something my old router could’nt handle.
Review by Najeeb Khan for Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Rating:
Very easy to set up and excellent value. Has transformed our home wireless. The speed difference is easily felt on a 10MB internet line. Bonus of pleasant blue LCD. Kick myself for not getting this a few years ago.
Review by Jono for Netgear Rangemax NEXT Dual Band Wireless Router
Rating:
When you look at the technical details for this product, please note that it is just an Ethernet Router…. that is, it connects network devices together that use the Ethernet Protocol.
If you use Cable, then the interface that Virgin Media provide you with is an RJ45 Ethernet Connection, so at the other end of the wire there is another Ethernet device that will talk to your Router.
If you use BT/Talk Talk etc… – anything that comes in via a standard telephone line, it is known as ADSL, (Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line) and you are NOT using an Ethernet connection, it is invariably a PPoA connection…. which talks to something known as a DSLAM (Digital Subsciber Line Access Multiplexer) in the telephone exchange. So you can not plug this ADSL sort of connection into this box directly, because it will not work.
The BT phone network had to be “modified” to allow us to use very old telephone lines that ran over long distances to access the Internet, so they could not use Ethernet point to point.
Without being overly simplistic, it is like wiring up your toaster to an RJ45 connector, and plugging it into your Router….. or like putting a DVD into a car CD player …. it fits, but it won’t work. Ethernet and PPoa are not the same, and they send different signals down the wires.
If you want to connect your network to a BT/etc.. telephone Broadband connection, then you need to buy….. you guessed it, an “ADSL Broadband Router” or “ADSL Modem”.
I hope this clears up previous reviewer comments and stops anyone else from making the same mistake.