
Buffalo AirStation 1300 Gigabit Dual Band Media Bridge review
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The big thing for this Buffalo AirStation 1300 Gigabit Dual Band Media Bridge are its 802.11ac capabilities. Are they any good?
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The big thing for this Buffalo AirStation 1300 Gigabit Dual Band Media Bridge are its 802.11ac capabilities. Are they any good?

Buffalo eases us into next-generation 802.11ac wireless with an accomplished router. But how does the new tech work?

The Buffalo Cloudstation Duo aims to make setting up your cloud as easy as possible

The Buffalo AirStation N450 USB 2.0 Wireless Adapter WLI-UC-G450 uses Buffalo's 'beamforming' tech - used in the Buffalo AirStation N-Technology HighPower ADSL2+ Modem Router - to focus and direct Wi-Fi signals.

If you live in a house that's shared by a number of heavy downloaders and online gamers, your wireless router is going to come under some serious strain, with a big impact on internet performance.

Bring your Wi-Fi to hard to reach places with this wireless network extender

We warm to this plug'n'go storage

The Buffalo LinkStation Mini 500GB is tiny, but powerful enough to be a contender

When Buffalo visited the TechRadar offices to show off this product its representatives confessed that they didn’t quite know who would buy the LinkStation Mini. A squashed down version of the company’s very successful LinkStation Live range, the Mini packs in two 500GB 2.5-inch laptop hard drives in a fanless casing.

If you want to extend your network to a single direction, the WLE-MYG is a directional antenna that's cited to increase wireless range up to two times. We used it with several 802.11g routers and found the range improved drastically...
The first thing you'll notice about the Buffalo Nfiniti is how cheap it is. Buffalo has used the Broadcom Intensi-Fi chip in its Nfiniti router to dynamically combine two 20MHz channels in the 2.4GHz range to give a wide 40MHz channel...

Buffalo certainly seems to pride itself on being one of the first networking companies to hit the market with new technologies, thanks to a close relationship with Broadcom.On a performance front, the Buffalo kit was reassuringly solid in all conditions.

For those not prepared to wait infinitely for wireless N

Basing any piece of technology on draft specification is risky, particularly when it's not due for final ratification until the summer of 2007. But Buffalo isn't worried