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Hawking Technology
Broadband Booster
The broadband router is
a hot selling item, right? This would lead me to believe that there are a lot of
households out there with more than one computer. To put things into
perspective, when Windows 3.1 was the dominant operating system, there was a
real push to put a computer into every home. At that time, statistics
showed that only 1 out of every 10 households owned some type of computer. Fast
forward 10 years to the present and we haven't quite realized that vision just
yet, but the number of households that do own a computer is definitely up.
It is speculated for every 60,000 homes, only one will NOT have a computer. I
would like to see some statistical data that shows how many households have
more than one computer.
Whether it's for a Small
Office/Home office kind of environment, or simply to keep the rest of the family
off of your computer. The reasons aren't really important. What is important is
providing a means so that everyone can get online at the same time. This is
where buying the router comes into play. With very little post-installation
administration, everything runs smooth the majority of the time. After all, it
doesn't take a whole lot of bandwidth to pull a few web pages down. Even if
everyone is surfing at the same time. Now imagine this scenario: a 3 computer
LAN -- Computer #1 is downloading a service pack from Microsoft, Computer #2 is
streaming a music video from Yahoo, and Computer #3 is trying to play Quake IV
online. It doesn't matter what kind of broadband connection you have, this kind
of activity is going to cause some lag. Why would it when the average high
speed packages reach upwards of 3 megabit download rates? The problem
isn't bandwidth, it's how the packets are organized when they leave or enter
your router.

A typical
router isn't' designed to optimize the traffic going through it. Instead, a
router's main selling points are how secure the firewall's stateful packet
inspection is going to make your LAN. A router does nothing to improve the
quality of service going from it to the modem. Likewise, the modem is simply
getting your requests from the router and putting it out on The Web. It's also
getting all those signals back and handing them off to the router so it can
inspect them for security and then hand them off to the machine that requested
them.
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