drinkingbird
Part of the Furniture
Mom's old Cisco/Linksys single band N router died, needed a new one while I was up visiting today. Closest thing was Walmart and they had a decent spec Netgear AC1200 on clearance for $28 or so. 100M ports and 150M/866M wifi are plenty for her needs. New linksys is garbage, and they had a TP Link for $30, but figured the Netgear being like 60% off, get the better one for a couple bucks less.
Not only do they attempt to force you to create a Netgear account to change any settings on the router at all (I bypassed it by unplugging the WAN every time it tried, which causes it to let you click "try again later", but it tries again every time you log in and even while you're logged in). Their GUI is awful. You can't choose 20Mhz channel in 2.4Ghz settings, instead you have to know the difference between "Up to 145mbit" and "up to 300mbit" options. It defaults to 300mbit (40mhz as it is a 2 stream). It does have "40/20mhz coexistence" enabled by default which claims to only use 40mhz if the spectrum is available, but given how many netgears I've seen on scans running 40mhz, I doubt it works well. Various other annoyances throughout the gui, slow and hard to navigate too.
Hey it is working for what I needed and it was cheap, but man I would never buy one of those for myself, and had I known, I would have gotten the TP Link next to it for a couple dollars more. TP's GUI is crude but it does not force you to set up an account with tons of required personal info just to administer the router, and generally the settings are straightforward and don't require you to translate "friendly" settings to actual technical info. I've found them to not be the most reliable or highest performing brand in the past, but they seem to have gotten better. I just regarded the Netgear name as higher quality having used them way in the past and knowing their stuff generally scores very well in performance testing. But that whole "provide us all your personal info just to change the SSID" garbage does not fly with me. HP tries to do it with their latest printers if you want to enable scanning. MS tries to make you think you have no option when installing Windows (have to unplug the network cable to get the option to use a local account now). I do not like this trend.
Sure I could set up an account using all bogus info and a burner email address but that's not the point.
The Asus stock and Merlin setups are far superior to both, actually shocking how crude the netgear looks by comparison and the lack of options and settings. The GUI looks the same as it did 20 years ago. I guess they are hoping you'll download and install their app, so they can gather even more info about you (it prompts you constantly for that too).
Just mind boggling, Netgear, a company founded to produce consumer networking gear and continues to focus exclusively on that today, selling stuff that is far inferior to Asus, who primarily is a PC maker that branched off and did some networking stuff.
Not only do they attempt to force you to create a Netgear account to change any settings on the router at all (I bypassed it by unplugging the WAN every time it tried, which causes it to let you click "try again later", but it tries again every time you log in and even while you're logged in). Their GUI is awful. You can't choose 20Mhz channel in 2.4Ghz settings, instead you have to know the difference between "Up to 145mbit" and "up to 300mbit" options. It defaults to 300mbit (40mhz as it is a 2 stream). It does have "40/20mhz coexistence" enabled by default which claims to only use 40mhz if the spectrum is available, but given how many netgears I've seen on scans running 40mhz, I doubt it works well. Various other annoyances throughout the gui, slow and hard to navigate too.
Hey it is working for what I needed and it was cheap, but man I would never buy one of those for myself, and had I known, I would have gotten the TP Link next to it for a couple dollars more. TP's GUI is crude but it does not force you to set up an account with tons of required personal info just to administer the router, and generally the settings are straightforward and don't require you to translate "friendly" settings to actual technical info. I've found them to not be the most reliable or highest performing brand in the past, but they seem to have gotten better. I just regarded the Netgear name as higher quality having used them way in the past and knowing their stuff generally scores very well in performance testing. But that whole "provide us all your personal info just to change the SSID" garbage does not fly with me. HP tries to do it with their latest printers if you want to enable scanning. MS tries to make you think you have no option when installing Windows (have to unplug the network cable to get the option to use a local account now). I do not like this trend.
Sure I could set up an account using all bogus info and a burner email address but that's not the point.
The Asus stock and Merlin setups are far superior to both, actually shocking how crude the netgear looks by comparison and the lack of options and settings. The GUI looks the same as it did 20 years ago. I guess they are hoping you'll download and install their app, so they can gather even more info about you (it prompts you constantly for that too).
Just mind boggling, Netgear, a company founded to produce consumer networking gear and continues to focus exclusively on that today, selling stuff that is far inferior to Asus, who primarily is a PC maker that branched off and did some networking stuff.
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