Monday, January 6th 2014

Linksys Unveils the WRT1900AC Wireless Router

Linksys today announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, that it is bringing back the heritage of the best-selling router of all time - the Linksys WRT54G but updated and modernized it with the most leading edge available Wireless-AC technology on the market.

The new Linksys WRT1900AC Dual Band Wi-Fi Router is inspired by the original WRT54G iconic blue/black stackable form factor but with a modernized spin as well as more powerful hardware such as a dual-core 1.2 GHz processor, four removable antennas (instead of the standard three) and eSata and USB 2.0/3.0 connectivity ports. The new WRT1900AC ships with Linksys Smart Wi-Fi set-up and management tools and will be the first Linksys router to include the Network Map feature. Linksys has also been working with the OpenWRT community to make an open source firmware downloadable when product is available.
"Our new Linksys WRT1900AC Wireless Router will be the most powerful router in its class on the market. We have spared no technology expense to make this router a prosumer's dream," said Mike Chen, vice president product management for Linksys. "The launch of the new WRT router is not only a celebration for the Linksys brand but for our customers too. We have brought back the WRT because our customers have asked for a router that had the reliability, functionality and open source capabilities with today's AC wireless technology. The WRT1900AC is the result of all these requests."

The new WRT provides the most robust specifications of any currently available router on the market and will be the world's first open source compatible router with a dual-core 1.2 GHz processor, 4 customized and removable antennas, 128 MB flash memory and an eSATA port.

Performance Perfected
The Linksys Wireless AC 1900 Dual-Band Router is capable of speeds of up to 1.3 Gbps on the 5 GHz band and up to 600 Mbps on the 2.4 GHz band.

The combination of all the above features and functionality together enabled us to build a robust router that could perform without lag or buffering for the dozens of wireless products families have on their networks today including laptops, tablets, smart phones, gaming consoles, media centers, hard drives, TVs, computers, printers and the dozens of connected devices still coming to market.

Open Source/Linux
Open Source is a vehicle for other communities, such as DD-WRT, Open WRT, and Tomato, to create their own custom versions of open source firmware for the product. OpenWRT developers will be provided hardware and SDKs/APIs to begin creating custom firmware for the WRT1900AC.

An OpenWRT custom firmware for WRT1900AC is planned to be available for download online at availability in the spring 2014.

Antenna Diversity for increased coverage
Like all AC1900 routers, data is transmitted on three spatial streams. The four removable, customized and adjustable antennas on the WRT1900AC router provide antenna diversity by enabling the router to use the three best signals out of the four antennas to transmit and receive data. The antenna diversity technology helps provide greater range and coverage compared to a 3-antenna system, so all your connected devices can achieve the best performance wherever they are located.

Smart Wi-Fi
Included with our Linksys EA-Series routers and now the WRT1900AC router, Smart Wi-Fi is a setup and management software tool that gives users access to their connected devices from a browser or mobile app so they can easily manage their home network and optimize their online experiences. Users can access their home network remotely on their iOS or Android smart phone or tablet to check the connection status of their devices, give a guest access to the Internet, or block a child from accessing social networking sites.

Linksys is also announcing a new Smart Wi-Fi feature called Network Map on the new WRT1900AC router. Network Map is a visual topology map that shows all the devices that are connected to the network. Users can simple manage each device by clicking on its icon and change parental control settings, select wireless bands, filter by device type, or even remove devices from the network, plus more. Network Map provides a simple more graphical way to monitor and manage a home network.

Award Honoree:
The Linksys WRT1900AC Dual Band Wi-Fi router has also been named as an International CES Innovations 2014 Design and Engineering Awards Honoree in the Home Networking product category. The Awards are judged by a preeminent panel of independent industrial designers, engineers and members of the media to honor outstanding design and engineering in cutting edge consumer electronics products.

The Linksys WRT1900AC Router will be on display at the Linksys/Belkin booth, South Hall 3 #30451, from January 7-10, 2013.

Pricing and Availability
The new Linksys WRT1900AC Dual-Band Wireless-AC Router is planned for availability this spring. MSRP is $299.99.
Add your own comment

8 Comments on Linksys Unveils the WRT1900AC Wireless Router

#1
AsRock
TPU addict
OOh, $300 OUCH
Posted on Reply
#2
Mindweaver
Moderato®™
Great! I want an upgraded model of "WRT54GL". :toast: If anyone is wondering the "L" is for Linux. ;)
Posted on Reply
#3
HisDivineOrder
That price is crazy, but I have to hand it to Belkin that they really are using the Linksys brand a lot better than Cisco. There are a LOT of people who kept their WRT54 routers just because they were so easy to mod and rock solid.

My experience with N routers has been less favorable, though I've not tried the last couple or any of the new AC routers. Building a router from the ground up to favor open source directly and to build on that old heritage may be a great way to draw in users who've been sitting on the sidelines, annoyed that a router they loved (and worshipped apparently?) never got a real successor.

Companies actually paying attention to what their users love? Odd.

But that price is going to scare more than a few people away. I think Belkin could have cut the fourth antenna and not seen much loss.
Posted on Reply
#4
omnimodis78
Any word on what sort of energy efficiency technologies found their way into this brand new router? Or is this point still not important to consumers?
Posted on Reply
#5
1c3d0g
I like their open source deal, but I don't like the fact that Linksys was bought out by Belkin. They've made some of the worst modems/routers imaginable.
Posted on Reply
#6
bpgt64
I have tried to replace my WRT54G(going on 6 years now). Every time I bring in another model, the signal isn't nearly as good.
Posted on Reply
#7
Mindweaver
Moderato®™
bpgt64I have tried to replace my WRT54G(going on 6 years now). Every time I bring in another model, the signal isn't nearly as good.
Yea, I'm still using one of my WRT54GL's with DD-WRT and it's rock solid.
Posted on Reply
#8
remixedcat
1c3d0gI like their open source deal, but I don't like the fact that Linksys was bought out by Belkin. They've made some of the worst modems/routers imaginable.
This. Sis had a Blekin and it only lasted a day. Couldn't even keep proper time on the GUI and the wireless only worked for an hour.
Posted on Reply
Apr 19th, 2024 19:40 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts