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I'm having a hard timne figuring out how a new router improved your download
speed by 20% since your connection to the internet is only a fraction of the speed of any local router connections. Most hispeed internet connections, dsl, cable, etc. average somewhere around 1 to 2 meg. Local hardwired ethernet is either 10meg or 100 meg. Most local are 100meg. I'm thinking you did not do a valid comparison. It's hard to do a valid comparison as your hispeed internet connection speed also varies depending on who else is active in your immediate area as you share the routers belonging to your provider with your neighbors. As well as the type and length of the connection and the percentage of errors. "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... I ran out of ports on my old four-port wired Netgear router, so, instead of buying a switch and adding it on, I bought a wired Linksys eight-port router. Ran a speed test immediately afterwards and noticed to my delight a 20% uptick in download speed. My old Netgear router was about five years old, I guess, and the Linksys router I bought was introduced two years ago, I was told. Interestingly, the number of wired routers available is down substantially since the advent of WiFi. I suppose almost everyone is going wireless in the home, but I still think wired is mo' betta. When we built this house, I connected several rooms with Cat5e cable. I do use wireless at the kitchen table sometimes, and it works just fine, but it is not nearly as fast as wired. The new router is a BEFSR81. Well under $100, if you're shopping for one. |
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