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That has been my experience with Amazon. No restock fee (assuming everything is returned and packed nicely). And many times they even refund the original shipping charges.Just a quick note, when I returned an Asus rt-n56u router to Amazon after trying it out and seeing that it wasn't what I was looking for, I got a full refund, no restocking fee. Your mileage may vary, of course, but this was just earlier this year.
Well, I agree that the DIR-827 would be very suitable for me. I mean the QoS is why I am after a D-Link, otherwise I'd get any other high end router. However, since 3-stream has been out for a little while now, I'd rather have a 3-stream capable router. In any case, I can't open up the DIR-827 they sent me and test it, since I'd take a hit on a re-stocking fee then. Leaving it all wrapped up and going through the Amazon RMA process will ensure zero cost to return ship and a full refund. Right now the much older DIR-655 would even be fine for me, since I don't have any need for a wireless signal, but I know I'm going to be investing in a laptop soon and I'll get a 3-stream adapter for it if it doesn't come with one. Like I said, the most important function for me is QoS (which only D-Link does right in SOHO routers), secondly is port forwarding for my NAS (any router can do this), and third is 3-stream capability. I wish some other manufacturer offered a SOHO wireless router with a good automatic QoS engine like D-Link, because D-Link is soooo slow with releasing their routers. I mean the V2 of the Linksys E4200 has already been released, whereas D-Link showed us their Amplifi lineup at last years E3 (January 2011), and won't even release the DIR-857 until February 2012 at the soonest. I've waited this long, so I guess I can wait a little longer.
Three stream N offers no advantage over dual-stream unless you have a three-stream adapter. Then you can get a bit higher speed, but only with very strong signal (same or next room).I am curious why you feel the QoS app that d-link supplies is superior to others?
And what does 3-stream capability do for the avg. home office user with one hardwired desktop and 4 wireless laptops and a printer?
the most important function for me is QoS (which only D-Link does right in SOHO routers)
Kinda puzzled on this statement - QoS tagging is end-to-end, and needs to be done at the ethernet frame level - most current SOHO routers have this enabled by default these days as part of WMM.
It can be confusing but there are many different forms of QoS. It can be at layer 7 and be in the form of traffic shaping. It does not always have to be layer 2. IIRC, the StreamEngine is layer 7 with DPI. Basically, taking a qualified packet in memory and placing it in queue to be TX before a packet that is not as latency sensitive. If need be the QoS engine can fragment a larger TCP packet to place within the fragmentation a latency sensitive packet.
Sounds reasonable - it's probably better then to refer to it as traffic shaping -
QoS is very specific...
Sounds reasonable - it's probably better then to refer to it as traffic shaping -
QoS is very specific...
Yes, I know it's all down to the Ubicom chipset to handle the QoS or traffic shaping. My statement about D-Link being the only SOHO networking provider to do proper QoS was ultimately directed as a comparison between the other major players like Netgear or Linksys using Broadcom or Ralink chipsets. I'm only considering getting a router from a major company to alleviate my concerns over firmware updates, otherwise I'd be getting a Ubicom router. Also, I'm attracted to the latest D-Link models because of their looks.![]()
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