this is not a response to anything in particular, maybe its just me, but I find it humorous some of the expectations of usb drives attached to routers, when dedicated nas devices have a hard time getting it right.
Very well said. It speaks to the old phrase about how ignorance is bliss. And that's exactly what some of these marketeers count on. They put a 2-bit feature that looks really cool on paper and stop short of saying it's a NAS; all the while, they've built the perception. So while it legitimately might provide some basic LAN storage functionality, it would be prudent for the customer to really educate themselves on exactly what USB storage hung off a router really is so that they can determine the value of it for themselves. Hence why forums like this are so valuable, so that we all can stay a step ahead of the marketeers, pros and novices alike.That's a fair poke. I'd probably find it funny if you wanted to use 4X100mm wheels for inline skating competitions when 4X110mm is the fastest and most widely accepted configuration. It's probably not funny to you if you're not a serious inline skating competitor for the same reason that your networking comment isn't particularly funny to me because I'm not highly experienced in networking. Therefore, I first take the advertised features at face value, that the product does what it says. That's funny to you just like 100mm wheels are to me.
Jeff
Thanks for the kind words.But that being said, I must commend SNB for being the most informed and is as unbiased as possible in a real world environment. Good work Tim.
I've seen lots of wireless equipment being tested due to the nature of my work.
There are many test methods, some practical, some not so practical.
For example, to test the actual electronics they test the devices inside a shielding chamber so all external interference is blocked. They also don't use antennas, they connect the wireless devices together using RF cables through an attenuation device.
Using this method, the signal goes from one device straight to another inside a shielding chamber. You'll get crazy high throughput figures using this method. It's testing the maximum performance in the perfect environment.
A more practical test would of course be over the air. But you'll need to find a completely clean location, such as an underground car park where there are no wireless signals at all. Then you can put the devices exactly 10 metres or 30 metres etc apart. Also try to use the exact same spots as the signal is also affected by surrounding walls, remember MIMO uses reflections to improve signal reception.
Testing should not be done using file transfer method. The industry standard is using ixChariot, which is what SNB uses.
Nothing wrong using the file transfer methodology for testing. You need to know how well it performs LAN to LAN. I've worked at many clients sites and 10 gig data over the wired and 802.11x protocols were tested to see how well transfers rates were. Main client wants their end users to be able to access data without delay as that's the scope here.
Most home users are going to care more about the wireless signal and secondary the data transfer rate. I am doing both. SNB test helps the user decide how well the router or wireless router performs wireless and wired WAN to LAN and LAN to WAN.
ixChariot is a more accurate indication of throughput. I'm sure Tim can explain why as he uses it for SNB reviews.
so what is that review site? I'm just suprised that toms hardware gave the wndr3700 such a poor review when compared to the wrt610
(http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/802.11n-wireless-router-access-point,2605.html)
I do trust smallnetbuilder's reviews more- you guys go very in depth in your review and really try to be as scientific as possible- but I also like toms hardware reviews in general so I was just suprised at the discrepancy
Because of the restrictions in our test setup, we had to pair both of these Netgear routers with Netgear’s own WNDA3100 USB adapter. To make a long story short, this was disastrous, we went through three of these adapters before finding one that yielded even moderately decent results. As soon as we switched to our notebook’s internal 11n adapter, performance bounded forward. Unfortunately, we have to stick with our same-brand results. The WNDA3700 is a good router. Just be sure to use it with someone else’s client adapter.
we used a little tool called Bandwidth Monitor to grab a few seconds of activity from several file transfer tests. Check out these two comparisons, one showing a transfer from the router (red bars) and the other to the router (green bars).
Could Netgear give Linksys a run for its money? With a different client adapter, we suspect so. Some of our data sure hints at it
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Linksys EA9500 - Local DNS | General Wi-Fi Discussion | 5 | ||
P | Linksys Velop WHW03v1 firmware version 1.1.20.211186 | General Wi-Fi Discussion | 0 |
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