Manufacturer : Netgear Inc Model : WNDR3700 ASIN : B002HWRJY4 Price : 141.99$ See Special Offers Product DescriptionNetgear NETGEAR NT WNDR3700-100NAS RANGEMAX DUAL BAND WIRELESS-N GIGABIT ROUTER RETAIL WNDR3700-100NAS Routers & Gateways - Wireless 592 of 608 people found the following review helpful: NETGEAR RANGEMAX WNDR3700 - Fast, easy-to-use and rock solid This review is from: Netgear N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR3700 (Personal Computers) Modifying the two dual band networks for different names and passwords is straight forward, and I preferred to do it manually. After logging into the firmware, the screens are divided into three panels. The left panel is the list of the feature sets, such as "wireless settings," or "guest network" settings; the middle panel has the pick list of options for the feature set; and the right panel on the screen explains, in the easiest of terms, what the features and options mean. There is little need to refer to the product manual or other help. Everything is in one place, and in the right place. I attained maximum speeds with each of the dual bands when my laptops were in close proximity to the router. My throughput on the 5 Ghertz band using the "n" protocol was a blazing 300 Mbps. With my previous router, I was never able to achieve anything faster than 130 Mbps. As is the case with the 5 Ghertz channel, this speed drops off quickly as I moved my laptop away from the router. By 30 feet, I was down to 100 Mbps a second, but still relatively fast when compared to the legacy "g" speeds. On the 2.4 Ghertz band, using the "g" protocol, I saw very little degradation within 50 feet of the router. I streamed a Netflix movie to an HD television flawlessly through a Toshiba laptop and an HDMI cable. There was no stutter in the picture, and the picture quality was excellent. Unlike past video streaming, I did not experience a dropped picture while waiting for the video buffer to reload. I connected a USB disk drive to the router and shared it among three laptops without incident. I established read and read/write passwords for various file folders on the disk drive. I also made the drive available for access through the Internet, and again this process was straightforward in creating. I plan on backing up the three laptops to the USB drive on the router, as well as sharing photos and other files with family and friends by having them access the password protected IP address of my new network-based disk drive. In total, you can establish four networks on this router. One for each of the dual bands, and two more as guest networks for each of the dual bands as well. The guest networks are nice as they can completely isolate guests from accessing sensitive information on other PCs or devices on the network. (Or you can open up the guest networks to everything on the network.) Some other features worth noting are the automatic checking for firmware updates every time you log into the router; the "traffic meter" that shows daily, weekly and monthly internet usage that can be configured to throttle it; and the ability to backup personalized firmware settings in case of an emergency restore. With regard to the latter, it would be nice to also get a saved PDF file of what the settings are for each of the backed-up firmware configurations. The Netgear WNDR3700 replaced two Linksys routers that I had connected together to essentially create a "dual band" environment. One was an older "g" unit, while the other was a newer "n" router. Together they got the job done in a mixed environment of video and Internet surfing. But the WNDR3700 takes routing to a newer level, with faster processors driving the dual bands to faster speeds and better range; and a big feature set that is easy to use, understand and configure. SIX-MONTH UPDATE - This router has been powered up constantly for six months now, and it continues to run flawlessly. During this time, two firmware updates have been automatically flagged and applied without incident. I use many of the key features of this router across the three laptops that are connected wirelessly to the dual bands. Video streaming from Netflix and other Internet sites continues to work smoothly. Being able to connect a USB disk drive to the router has become a heavily-used feature. The router-based disk drive is the central location for backing up the data from the three laptops. I can backup these laptops locally, or from anywhere using the Internet. When traveling with a camera and a laptop, I am able to easily backup digital pictures to the router's USB disk drive. It is another way to save and protect files when away. This router is my third, and best to date. 103 of 113 people found the following review helpful: Feature rich, high-performance wireless router This review is from: Netgear N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR3700 (Personal Computers) Pros: - Feature rich, high-performance. - Nice vertical stand included. - USB storage feature turns your external drive into a network share. - Comes with QoS (a must for VOIP), dynamic DNS, firewall, features. - Easy to upgrade the firmware and it will automatically check for updates. - Good documentation. - Dead-simple installation and you can skip the Insert This CD-ROM install method. - Ability to set up "guest" network with separate settings in addition to your main network. Cons: - Traffic bandwidth monitoring is rudimentary. It is actually very good for an off-the shelf router, but I'm spoiled by my home router which runs Tomato firmware: it has pretty graphs. - USB storage feature needs work. You can only use your router's admin password to protect your shares. Configuring settings with Google Chrome or non-firefox, non-IE browsers may silently fail (as it did for me). The workaround is to reapply settings with IE or Firefox. All in all a very solid product. I give it 4.5 stars, as I wasted time chasing down the Chrome/Web GUI bug. I have no doubt this will become a 5-star product as Netgear pushes out new firmware updates. 76 of 83 people found the following review helpful: Netgear Rangemax WNDR3700 Dual Band Wireless-N Gigabit Router This review is from: Netgear N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR3700 (Personal Computers) Have been running a D-Link DGL-4300 for several years with good results. Needed a replacement with more speed and processing power to handle multi-media, large LAN file transfers and N wireless services. Tried the D-Link DIR-825, but undocumented MAC address restrictions killed the deal. The router would not accept a non-zero value for the first two characters of the WAN MAC address. Looked at the Linksys WRT-610N, but was concerned with past Linksys product performance. Purchased the Netgear WNDR3700 which was getting very good reviews and selling out quickly after release. Configuration was a breeze with typical Netgear menus. LAN and WiFI speed are excellent. The DLNA USB device option works great, streaming pictures to our LAN connected Samsung TV. Guest WiFi access with LAN restrictions makes sharing with guests or visiting family easy. There have been no issues using Vonage VoIP and transferring large amounts of data at the same time. QOS settings are available in the WNDR3700, but I'm not currently using it. Even with QOS and rules active, the DGL-4300 would sometimes cause the VoIP to stutter during large transfers. Port Address Translation (PAT) is not available. This makes it difficult to access multiple Port 80 LAN devices from the WAN side. I rate the unit 4.5+ stars. PAT would have made it a five. Best Router I've Ever owned. Just don't rely on customer service if you have any problems Awesome product, a pretty sweet upgrade from my old D-link router. I recomend this product highly if you want the best bang for your buck. But...... by Dr. Gregums Be Careful! Previously used and sold as new Purchased from Amazon in September because of the great reviews and duel band offering. The delivery was prompt and the package was shrink wraped with inside contents sealed with... by California Shopper Warranty worth less than monopoly money The device failed after 4 months of use. When I called Netgear, they said that my warranty expired (which isn't true) and that the only way to get support was to pay them $79 per... by Maverick Netgear Router Review I was hesitant to tackle this installation myself, but needn't have been. The hardware instantly recognized the signal. by Cillairne@aol.com Netgear router ok, Netgear Tech Support Horror Story described here: I forgot the password for my Netgear wireless router, and due to making a change in the Intel wireless adapter window, I lost the connection between the computer and the router,... by Marlis Dewyea Refurbished Product sometimes not a good deal The Netgear WNDR3700 is a highly rated item and the reviews are good and bad. You have to remember when reading reviews about a router from other users their experience is based... by Thomas Berger Never again The worst performanace ever. Clearly has flawed firmware. I have to reset daily. Lots of great features - but who cares? Primary function should be reliable operation. by Cyber Sec Pro really good good quality, strong constant signal optimal for multiple streaming and downloads, the only bad side would be that for some reason some times but not often i lose connection to... by plachy Unit's 2.4 band failed after installation Unit was working fine upon purchase but apparently underwent hardware failure. As of 2 days ago the 2. by M. Kobin Don't waste your money on this piece of junk This item was easy to set up and offered fast surfing but firmware updates are far and few between, I have owned for one year, constantly loses internet connectivity, crashes, the... by Mark D. |
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Saturday, December 10, 2011
Netgear N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR3700
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