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New Re: Why separate router and wireless?
Good question, Andrew. This topology seems to be what I needed based on the equipment I was able to track down. The coax will (depending on the installation) either be in the basement or coming out of an existing coax port already used for cable TV (I'm not sure exactly how this works; is the [analog] cable TV available simulatneously at the same jack as the broadband connectin, and the signals are multiplexed, or does a separate cable need to be run from the amplifier ont he telephone pole? More ignoracne on my part....) In either case, the computers are up on the second floor of my house, so running a hard-wired connection between the cable modem and the computer(s) is out of the question. Hence the wireless. I've seen boxes that allow you to run the coax directly to a card on the computer, then wireless to the other computers in the installation, making the computer the router (of sorts) and the WAP. This topology wouldn't work here.

[link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=196834|Peter drew this picture] which seems to fit the model of how I need to hook this proposed system up. for the purposes of this discussion consider the cable modem and router in the basement, and the computers on the second floor.

Is this what you were looking for in an answer?
jb4
shrub\ufffdbish (Am., from shrub + rubbish, after the derisive name for America's 43 president; 2003) n. 1. a form of nonsensical political doubletalk wherein the speaker attempts to defend the indefensible by lying, obfuscation, or otherwise misstating the facts; GIBBERISH. 2. any of a collection of utterances from America's putative 43rd president. cf. BULLSHIT

New Note that the unit that converts cable to ethernet . .
. . will be provided by your cable company. The Linksys does not do that conversion but is actually just an ethernet router with no cable or DSL smarts whatever. You are concerned with what's in Peter's blue box where the Linksys would replace his Buffalo. Outside the box is provided by the cable company.

The Linksys (or any similar unit) has one WAN ethernet connection that can plug into any ethernet device. It has 4 LAN ethernet connections and the wireless access point which connects internally.

The Linksys is a Linux box which provides basic firewalling, port forwarding and that sort of stuff on a scale suitable for home or small business.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
New Yes, the cable people will provide the cable modem...
...for a "small monthly fee". My purpose in looking at the BEFCMU10 (or equiv) is to eliminate that "small monthly fee". In Peter's picture, that cable modem is the Motorola SurfBoard. I believe that the BEFCMU10 replaces that in my proposed layout.

Other than that, I'm with you....
jb4
shrub\ufffdbish (Am., from shrub + rubbish, after the derisive name for America's 43 president; 2003) n. 1. a form of nonsensical political doubletalk wherein the speaker attempts to defend the indefensible by lying, obfuscation, or otherwise misstating the facts; GIBBERISH. 2. any of a collection of utterances from America's putative 43rd president. cf. BULLSHIT

New I wasn't aware of that unit.
Apparently it's new, and I don't think they're charging rent for the modems around here, at least not separately itemized so there would be no savings. I'll ask a couple of subscribers.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
New Is/was charged here
Had so many ownership changes, don't remember who originally had it. Comcast now. I purchased my modem to eliminate the monthly charge.

Comcast charges for everything. Even the remote control for the TV cable box.
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail ... but, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "Damn...that was fun!"
New Cabling.
The cable modem will be able to plug into an existing outlet. If you still want to use that outlet for TV, then you'd just use a splitter like you normally would to get an extra outlet.

The internet connection comes down a few bandwidth slots designated for data. Each channel has a slot; they just assign one or two for Internet traffic and tell the cable modem. There's another special channel used for upstream data. So, no extra cable from the street. :-) Due to cable TV being a largely "one-to-many" system, one thing that needs to be checked is that at each repeater and head-end the doohickeys are in place for the upstream traffic to flow. That activity would come under "line conditioning".

Wade.

Is it enough to love
Is it enough to breathe
Somebody rip my heart out
And leave me here to bleed
 
Is it enough to die
Somebody save my life
I'd rather be Anything but Ordinary
Please

-- "Anything but Ordinary" by Avril Lavigne.

     So lemme get this straight (wireless/Broadband question) - (jb4) - (17)
         Why separate router and wireless? - (Andrew Grygus) - (6)
             Re: Why separate router and wireless? - (jb4) - (5)
                 Note that the unit that converts cable to ethernet . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (3)
                     Yes, the cable people will provide the cable modem... - (jb4) - (2)
                         I wasn't aware of that unit. - (Andrew Grygus) - (1)
                             Is/was charged here - (jbrabeck)
                 Cabling. - (static)
         I'd try to go with WPA-PSK if possible - (Steven A S) - (8)
             Re: I'd try to go with WPA-PSK if possible - (dws) - (7)
                 Thanks for the feedback - (jb4) - (6)
                     Re: Thanks for the feedback - (dws) - (5)
                         Got it...thanx - (jb4) - (4)
                             Old Linksys gear - (dws) - (1)
                                 My experiences with Netgear - (pwhysall)
                             don't bother - (Steven A S) - (1)
                                 Understood... - (jb4)
         Suh-WEET! - (jb4)

No LRPD for you, one year!
82 ms