Recommend me a good wireless router (NTL bb)

Linksys WRT54GS is a start, as long as you don't get a lobotomised version.
Cheap(ish), stable, wide range of non-Linksys firmware, decent feature set.
 
tolien said:
Linksys WRT54GS is a start, as long as you don't get a lobotomised version.
Cheap(ish), stable, wide range of non-Linksys firmware, decent feature set.

Sorry I shoudl have mentioned that I'm after a router that's both compatible with a cable modem and an adsl modem, so that when I move house out of a cabled area I can still use the router.
 
blue_harvester said:
Sorry I shoudl have mentioned that I'm after a router that's both compatible with a cable modem and an adsl modem

It doesn't have an ADSL modem, so to all intents and purposes, it is. You won't get a router that has its own ADSL modem, and will work with cable.

so that when I move house out of a cabled area I can still use the router.

You can.
 
I'm using an MR814 with my ntl line, works fine for me as i dont use the network but its only 11mbps so it would depend if you want to transfer files internally or is it strictly for sharing the web :)
 
blue_harvester said:
Also when you said about a 'lobotomised version' what exactly did you mean and how do I tell whether it's 'lobotomised'?

The latter versions of the G and GS won't take non-Linksys firmware because they run a different OS. Hence, lobotomised.
 
Tolien - any idea exactly which ones would use non-Linksys firmware? I presume they dont use Linux and so doesnt allow modification of the firmware (yet)...

Looking to pick a wireless router up myself to add to my BEFSR41 backbone...

linuxdevices.com said:
Linksys last month switched the standard model of its ubiquitous WRT54G wireless router from Linux to VxWorks, starting with the "series 5" version. Now, Linksys is shipping a Linux-based WRT54GL model that it says it created specially for Linux hobbyists, hackers, and aficianados. The L version is identical to the "series 4" WRT54G units that Linux hobbyists have long enjoyed hacking, according to the company.

Linksys's director of product marketing, Mani Dhillon, said Linksys made the switch because, as a more deeply embedded system, VxWorks allowed the company to halve the amounts of Flash and RAM in the device, while retaining similar functionality. Apparently, reducing memory-related BOM (bill-of-materials) costs more than offset the costs of licensing a proprietary OS, given the WRT54G's extremely high sales volume. "We sell literally hundreds of thousands per month," Dhillon said.

The new, VxWorks-based WRT54G "series 5" models have 2MB of Flash, and 8MB of RAM, compared with 4MB of Flash and 16MB of RAM in the earlier, Linux-based versions. Although the "series 5" devices offer Linux hobbyists less elbow room to load alternative firmware (assuming they could get around the bootloader to install it), it seems likely the hacker community will rise to the challenge.

Linux hackers and hobbyists have long hot-rodded their WRT54Gs, adding features such as Radius authentication, bridge capabilities, VoIP QoS (voice-over-IP quality-of-service), and so on. The L model will continue to offer 4MB of Flash, and 16MB of RAM, in order to support the various freely and commercially available alternative firmware images for the devices that depend on those memory capacities.

According to Dhillon, Linksys's biggest competitors in the wireless access point market, including NetGear and D-Link, switched from Linux to VxWorks long ago. "Linux has a larger memory footprint. To be honest with you, a lot of companies in the networking space have already switched," he said.

Dhillon adds, "We still wanted to have a Linux SKU for the Linux audience. In general, we want to make sure our Linux community is protected."

Dhillon's feel-good Linux-friendly message notwithstanding, Linksys probably has a large -- and growing -- enterprise clientele willing to void their AP warrantees in order to gain access to high-end features by upgrading the devices to more sophisted Linux-based firmware. Traditionally a consumer electronics house, Linksys is being shifted into the SMB market, parent company Cisco announced last month.

Linksys expects to sell about 10,000 "L" model WRT54Gs per month, "if we're lucky," Dhillon stated. Dhillon said no availability guarantees are offered on the L model.
Looks like I need to hunt down a v4 WRT54G/GS or the new L model (is that available in the UK?)

ps3ud0 :cool:
 
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sorry what I mean't to say was what's the disadvantage of not being able to take non-Linksys firmware?

All I want the router for is to take in the internet connection and share that connection with wired and wireless computers.
 
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