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..:: Hot ::.. Networking products sale at CompUSA.

I am sitting behind the AT&T router on my main gaming rig as we speak. I ordered the router and one 54Mbps G desktop card from the last sale for a total of $38 shipped with tax. It simply cannot be beat for the money. Card holds a great signal strength and router is very easy to set up. I would highly suggest the lastest firmware on www.plugeandshareatt.com. I was having intermitten problems with my IP dropping and this new firmware fixed it all.
 
Originally posted by: CCityInstaller
I am sitting behind the AT&T router on my main gaming rig as we speak. I ordered the router and one 54Mbps G desktop card from the last sale for a total of $38 shipped with tax. It simply cannot be beat for the money. Card holds a great signal strength and router is very easy to set up. I would highly suggest the lastest firmware on www.plugeandshareatt.com. I was having intermitten problems with my IP dropping and this new firmware fixed it all.

Thanks for the info. I may check this router out.
 
I can also vouch for the laptop card although it was giving me some problems when I tried connecting via the ATT software to my Microsoft Wireless router. I disabled their software and just used the windows management and it worked perfectly. I did buy the router as well since it was all going to a friend, but I haven't set it up yet. I'll bet that if the ATT PCMCIA card and the ATT router were used together, I could use their software as well. Not sure what I'm losing my not using it though.
 
Dows anyone here own or have experience with the access point ( http://www.compusa.com/products/product...p?ref=cj&product_code=302619&pfp=13005 ) ???

Could multiple PC's attach to this guy (with network cables), and then communicate wirelessly with other PC's attached to a wireless router that's already in place? Asking a different way... One group of PC's are attached to a wireless router. They see each other and get interent access. The wireless is used occasionally for visiting laptops (that have wireless built in of course). Could a second group of PC's with NIC's built in but not connected to anything get attached with cables to this acess point, and then be joined to the rest of the group (for file sharing and internet access)?

I ran through the Netgear site and it didn't show it hooked up that way as an option in their diagrams. But I thought that was what an "access point" does?
 
That 108Mbit/sec 'G' router sure looks a bit like the MS 'G' router, doesn't it?

I'm curious, do any of AT&T's routers support WDS or Client AP Mode? (Wich is what you were asking about, tracerbullet - client AP mode.)
 
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