No, there are many different speeds and other variables associated with routers. Most commonly, the speeds are 802.11, G, and N with variations of those. Those are listed in order of speed with N being the fastest. However, the speed will also depend on the device using the router. For example, if a laptop with a G receiver is on an N router, it will only get G speed.
Which brings me to my next point: There are also wireless and non-wireless routers. The above information only applies to wireless routes. As for wired routers, these are more similar. The only thing you will have to watch out for is the connection type your using. if you have dial-up internet or a 56k connection, you will need to buy the appropriate router. Same thing goes for a Ethernet or cable connection.
Another thing to look for is the number of ports available to use. If you are simple running 1 wire to 1 computer, all routers should have this function. However, if you are connecting multiple computers or sources to it, then you will need to make sure that there are enough ports to accomplish your needs
Linksys routers are pretty much the same as all the other routers. Linksys routers got 8 PINS. You can find the PIN if you turn the router upside down.
The adapters are all the same, all configured to work with similar routers. The routers used between the US and EU are not much different so the adapter should work fine.
Load balancing routers are used when you have multiple items running off the same router. What the load balancing router does, is when 2 or more devices are on the same router, it balances the bandwith so one device is not hogging up all the bandwith.
IP addresses are assigned by DHCP servers, not by routers. DHCP servers will cache your IP address and reassign the same IP until the cache is cleared. ----
Broadcast.
The highest IP address among the active interfaces will be used.
Broadcast.
Wireless routers can be connected via an ethernet cable in the same way as wired routers. If the second router has a client mode feature then the routers can also be connected wirelessly otherwise the second router will only function as a wireless access point.
The routers must agree on the network type. The routers must use the same dead interval
Basically they're all the same except for the shape of the bones.
A "database" is a collection of information, often organized in tables. OSPF routers - i.e., routers that implement the OSPF routing protocols - need to maintain several databases, for example, a neighbor database (a list of connected neighbors), and a link-state database (a list of all the connections between different routers in the same area, which the router has learned about).
routers