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The WRT54GL: A 54Mbps Router From 2005 Still Makes Millions For Linksys

Jon Brodkin, reporting for Ars Technica:In a time when consumers routinely replace gadgets with new models after just two or three years, some products stand out for being built to last. Witness the Linksys WRT54GL, the famous wireless router that came out in 2005 and is still for sale. At first glance, there seems to be little reason to buy the WRT54GL in the year 2016. It uses the 802.11g Wi-Fi standard, which has been surpassed by 802.11n and 802.11ac. It delivers data over the crowded 2.4GHz frequency band and is limited to speeds of 54Mbps. You can buy a new router -- for less money -- and get the benefit of modern standards, expansion into the 5GHz band, and data rates more than 20 times higher. Despite all that, people still buy the WRT54GL in large enough numbers that Linksys continues to earn millions of dollars per year selling an 11-year-old product without ever changing its specs or design.

3 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Great. Want 5,000 of them? by retroworks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can't remember the specific problems I had with it, but yeah, I owned one. I'm surprised to see it lauded since they don't sell all that well on ebay; my recycling company has huge boxes of them but they move very slowly, and the only wholesale volume markets offer scrap value only. But I admit they do sell, one by one, individually, for about $9.99 plus shipping, which is ok for old, used, non-antique (vintage) electronics, but not scaleable and not in the same league with other tech of the same vintage. Now take a Wyse-55 dumb terminal monitor, on the other hand, that will fetch $100 easy. Wish I would have kept the 5,000 or so of those we scrapped 15 years ago... and the PS1 IBM "clicky" keyboards sell for hundreds of dollars. I guess I don't see how the Linksys WRT54GL merits this attention as compared to (chills!) Okidata Microline dot matrix printers. I'd trade all our Linksys WRT54GL for a solid Oki 520.

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  2. Re: Damn Shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Better analogy is keep making Toyota hilux break pads. Someone will definitely buy them.

  3. Re:Because by markdavis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    >"Because people have these setup in commercial/industrial settings due the popularity of DD-WRT."

    Bingo.

    We have 26 of them in use for several years and I just bought several more a few months ago. I was shocked I could still buy them. We load Tomato Toastman Linux firmware on them and they are solid as a rock! It took a lot of testing and experimentation to get what we wanted (placement, range, mountings, wiring, firmware, settings, testing) and that was a good investment, but also significant in time and effort. It doesn't matter that they are not "N" or "AC" or dual band- we don't need any of that for basic WiFi. These work.