Yeah, but that's exactly how I do it. :-) n-only mode is 5GHz (if I
recall).  Higher frequency means higher bandwidth, albeit lower range,
all other factors being equal.

Plus, whenever a 'g' device is online the entire network drops to g
speed, as is my understanding.  If I just wanted to run a g network, I
never needed to buy a new router, right?

...at any rate...

Cheers!

Bill Napier wrote:
> Also, 802.11n is backwards compatible with 802.11g.  Just make sure
> you're not running your router in 802.11n only mode and your phone
> should connect fine with it.
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