Lets keep the home users away from the SOHO user. Completely different requirements. I would never recommend a Linksys for any SOHO or anyone who had things stock trades from home or other valuable information at risk. From a security standpoint, a Linksys is marginal at best but then it was never intended to be a high security device to start with. Benzguy did not specify for exactly what he wants to protect but I'm guessing a business interest of some kind. I've deployed Sonicwalls, PIXs, Linksys, Noki and other firewalls and I tend to use what fits the task at hand within a resonable set of parameters. Its the same argument about MTB helmets when I rode alot. Are your brains worth the 10 dollar helmet or the 50 dollar helmet. It astounded me that someone would spend hundreds of dollars for Ti nuts and bolts to save a few grams and cheap out on the helmet protecting the item that science can not repair. So is it better to spend thousands of dollars on a workstation at a home office, working with business documents worth even more money and protect all of this with a throwaway device for under 60 bucks? This makes zero sense in the big picture. It makes even less sense when here in CA if you are a business and get hacked, you have to say it in PUBLIC and if it came out that you were hacked due to the failure of a 60 dollar cheapo "firewall/router" at a SOHO, the sharks would be on you so fast, your head would spin.
Even the average home user is at risk any more as more and more bad guys are starting to understand that the average user, with their cheapo firewall is ripe for the picking of all kinds of personal information ranging from credit cards, passwords and banking info in the form of Quicken etc. It's bad enough with the worms and backdoors, why make it any easier?
:::stepping down of soap box:::
After having to clean up a few nasty messes for people, I tend to get wound up about this side of security. Apologies in advance if anyone is offended.
MikeS
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"Take advantage of the enemy's unreadiness, make your way by unexpected routes, and attack unguarded spots."
Sun Tzu