You’ll have to wait a bit for 11n Draft 1.10 gear

Photo of author

Tim Higgins

So to make sure I get the decks cleared to dive once again into draft 11n reviews, I asked Belkin, Buffalo Technology, D-Link, Linksys and Netgear what I thought were two simple questions. The first was: “Are there any draft 11n products in the field that will not be upgradeable to 1.10?”

Belkin and D-Link were the only two vendors who provided clear, simple answers to this question. Both clearly said that all of their current draft 11n products would be upgradeable to 1.10 via firmware updates. Linksys replied with its “official statement” on 11n upgradeability that essentially said “we think so” (my quotes, not Linksys’).

Netgear sent a similar response to Linksys’, referencing its chip vendors who were said to be providing a “strong indication” of firmware upgradeability. Buffalo finally responded after this article first posted and joined Belkin and D-Link with a clear, straight reply that its existing draft 11n products would be upgradeable.

The second question was: “When will updates be available to bring existing draft 11n products up to 1.10 compliance?”

Belkin was the only vendor to provide a simple and clear response, saying “we are targeting a March release for the firmware upgrades”. The “targeting” word, of course, provides some wiggle room, but I have to give Belkin credit for at least trying to pin down a timeframe and going on record.

Netgear was the next clearest, once again pointing to its chipset vendors as the gatekeepers and noting a Q1 timeframe as Netgear’s expectation for receiving 1.10 upgrades from them. D-Link said “updates will depend on when it’s through the processes currently in committee”. I found this puzzling, since 1.10 was put to bed via vote a little over two weeks ago. D-Link added, however, that it was currently focused on getting ‘Works with Centrino’ certification.

Like D-Link, Linksys‘ response pointed to uncertainly in the 1.10 draft as the reason that the company could not provide a timeframe for 1.10 firmware. When I pointed out to Linksys that the 1.10 had been approved on January 19, the response was only: “Until it’s officially official, it’s not official.”

Buffalo’s belated response was similar to Netgear and indicated that the timing of its 1.10 upgrades depends on availability of new drivers and firmware from its chipset vendors. But Buffalo didn’t provide any specific dates.

These responses tell me that most of the companies I surveyed are still in the process of firming up plans to ship draft 1.10 compliant gear. It also tells me that since Buffalo and Apple are starting to ship their dual-band draft 11n routers now, that gear won’t initially be 1.10 complaint.

However, Buffalo did tell me that it will be shipping its Wireless-N Nfiniti Dual Band Gigabit Router & Access Point with channel bonding turned off by default in the 2.4 GHz band. While it won’t be totally disabled like Intel is doing with its Next-Gen Wireless-N network connection cards, it’s at least a step forward until a 1.10 compliance firmware update is available.

Related posts

Comments moved to the Forums

In response to reader feedback, we have disabled the article Comments feature. All article discussion has now been moved to the SmallNetBuilder Forums.

Our 11n reviews resume

With the Wi-Fi Draft 11n certification process underway, I've decided its time to resume reviews of these products. This doesn't mean that I now consider the products to be "done"; far from it. But with the legitimacy of the Wi-Fi mark now being slapped on boxes, I figure someone has to see if these products are really living up to their claims.

No. We haven’t changed into NASNetBuilder

You would think from having had four networked storage articles in a row that we've morphed into something else. The truth is just that we've recently been swamped witih NASes and are just trying to keep up with the flow.