Currently, there are three basic standards when it comes to a wireless network's speed and efficiency. These are Wireless A (802.11a), Wireless B (802.11b) and Wireless G (802.11g). But, the newest standard that is the most efficicient at the moment, Wireless N, is now available at ShopWiki as well. Check out the Belkin N1 Wireless Router which "greatly increases the throughput and range of Wi-Fi equipment". The other new models following the Wireless N standard are Buffalo Technology's AirStation Nfiniti, D-Link's RangeBoosterN, Linksys Wireless-N and Netgear's Rangemax Next.
Currently, there are three basic standards when it comes to a wireless network's speed and efficiency. These are Wireless A (802.11a), Wireless B (802.11b) and Wireless G (802.11g). But, the newest standard that is the most efficicient at the moment, Wireless N, is now available at ShopWiki as well. Check out the Belkin N1 Wireless Router which "greatly increases the throughput and range of Wi-Fi equipment". The other new models following the Wireless N standard are Buffalo Technology's AirStation Nfiniti, D-Link's RangeBoosterN, Linksys Wireless-N and Netgear's Rangemax Next.
They are the most intense. They create the most unique atmosphere. Sure, the BCS Championship is the ultimate prize. But that's for later, and only an elite few have a real shot at that prize. As September draws to a close, let the blood feuds in conference play commence.
Miami has been the story of the early season. Jacory Harris has looked like Jim Kelly, Bernie Kosar, Vinny Testaverde and Ken Dorsey rolled into one. OK, that's a little over the top, but it's been so long since the Canes have had excellent quarterback play, you can forgive a little hyperbole.
The real test for Miami comes Saturday at Virginia Tech. I know the Hokies are sporadic, to put it kindly, on offense. But to use one of the most reliable quotes, if you want to be the man, you've got to beat the man. One dollar to "The Nature Boy" Ric Flair. The Hokies are the men in the ACC. They've been in the conference five years and won three championships. This is the test to see how close the Canes really are to being back.
Former Pitt WR and current USC assistant Yogi Roth spent a lot of time breaking down Miami tape. He tells me the best thing offensive coordinator Mark Whipple has done is create favorable matchups for Harris to exploit. The sophomore QB has done it masterfully thus far.
I'm curious to see whom the Hurricanes try to pick on in the Virginia Tech secondary. Alabama successfully targeted Kam Chancellor on a few deep balls. He struggled to keep up with the Tide receivers. Virginia Tech defensive coordinator Bud Foster believes Miami's offense has even more speed. How will the Hokies compensate? Will Whipple and Harris keep their magic touch of finding the most advantageous matchup? I already have Harris sitting second on my ESPN.com Heisman Watch ballot. Another big game might move him to the top of the heap.
Washington has a test perhaps as daunting as playing USC. Can the Huskies handle prosperity? It's been a long time since they've had any. The Huskies float into Stanford for a game featuring a running back among the nation's top 20 rushers and a quarterback in the top 25 in passing efficiency. Both play for Stanford. Toby Gerhart is a bull. Redshirt freshman QB Andrew Luck is a star in the making. I don't put an inordinate amount of stock in statistical rankings this early in the season, but Luck does sit 22 spots ahead of Jake Locker in passing efficiency. I'm just saying.
Watch out for special teams in this game. Again, this early, a long return or two can skew the numbers, but the Cardinal have the nation's leading kickoff return man in Chris Owusu and the fourth-ranked punt returner in Richard Sherman. Both Jim Harbaugh and Steve Sarkisian appear to be on course with the job of rebuilding. Both have beaten USC. This will be a test of Washington's maturity and important as a measuring stick for the rapidly improving Cardinal.
Remember how last week was all about revenge? I'm a little tired of the revenge motif. Glad to see Joe Paterno agrees. Iowa, which visits the Nittany Lions on Saturday, knocked them out of a likely national title shot last season.
Asked about the "R" word, Paterno said, "I don't know what revenge has got to do with it in football. It's not like they sneaked up on us and stuck us in the back with a knife or something. They played a good football game and they beat us."
He also said of last year's game, "We got licked." That's my favorite Paterno-ism. Every time I hear it, I think of life in black and white, and players donning single-bar facemasks running the wing-T. It's so old school, they ought to make that phrase hip again. Is it hip or fresh now?
Anyway, Penn State has gotten licked a lot by Iowa. The Hawkeyes have won six of seven in the series. In the preseason, I thought their schedule was the only thing keeping them from being Big Ten contenders, and they seem to be rounding into form after a lucky escape in the opener against Northern Iowa. Kirk Ferentz's teams always improve.
Penn State is a little banged up on D. Sean Lee and Navorro Bowman are nursing injuries. Even so, it's hard to imagine Penn State getting licked by Iowa again, especially in that Saturday night setting.
It's clear to me. I've seen enough. Arkansas QB Ryan Mallett has the strongest arm in the land. I'm not sure it's close. He leads the nation in passing efficiency and guides the high-powered Hogs into Tuscaloosa to face Alabama on Saturday.
For my money, you won't find two head coaches better on their respective sides of the ball than Bobby Petrino and Nick Saban. Petrino's offense is dynamic and diverse. The same is true of Saban's complex and stifling defensive schemes.
Saban told me the key to affecting and disrupting Mallett will be to disguise fronts and coverages, and to change it up. When Alabama brings pressure, it has to make Mallett get rid of the ball and avoid giving up the big play.
The game often is a tone setter in the SEC West. An 0-2 conference start quickly would reduce Arkansas from sleeper in the division to spoiler. An Arkansas win could signal chaos in the division all season.
It's not a conference game anymore, but what if Houston beats Texas Tech? The Cougars would be 2-0 versus the Big 12 South. That would trump anything Boise State is going to put on its resume. Oops. There I go again. Putting all the focus on the BCS picture. But this renewal of an old Southwest Conference battle should be fun.
Two quarterbacks from Abilene, Texas -- Taylor Potts and Case Keenum -- in a Texas-sized shootout. Each will throw for a million yards. Keenum told me this week it's been fun seeing the fans get energized about Cougars football again.
I'll also be eager to see whether Kansas has as much fight against Southern Mississippi as it did against its own basketball team. The football and basketball Jayhawks brawled on campus this week. Seriously? Did somebody take the last Wang burger at the Wheel? It's a hamburger with a fried egg on it from this great dive in Lawrence, and it wouldn't take much to make me fight for one. You'd think the Jayhawks would save that type of aggression for Missouri.
Kidding aside, the fight or fights were beyond stupid and a complete embarrassment for both the basketball and football programs, not to mention the entire university. It's even more embarrassing than being distracted all week by something dumb and letting a team come into your house and mess up your season. Rock, chalk, warn the Jayhawks.
Join us all weekend through "College Football Final" Saturday night after Notre Dame-Purdue.
Manchester United goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar has admitted he may call time on his lengthy career at the end of this season.
"I've said for a few years that it sometimes may be my last season," he revealed.
"Six months before my contract with Manchester United ended in December 2006, we extended for one year and so far it has been the same every time.
"I wait each season to see how or where I stand, if everyone is happy and if I can get motivated.
"But I know, because I always get older, it is increasingly likely that this will be my last season.
"In December, it will be clear how it goes. By then, I'll have clarity. It is a horrible dilemma."
Crouch was handed only his third start of the season at Deepdale but responded with three goals on the night.
Redknapp must now decide whether to stick with the England striker alongside Jermain Defoe against Burnley on Saturday or recall the rested Robbie Keane.
"It was a good hat-trick from Crouchie and good to see Robbie and Jermain get one each as well," said Redknapp.
"(Roman) Pavlyuchenko was injured, otherwise he might have scored and made it even harder for me. But it's a nice problem to have.
"We've moved on a lot in the last year and I thought we looked sharp and that every time we went forward we could open them up."
Meanwhile, Redknapp was also pleased to see defender Michael Dawson come through his first game of the season unscathed.
He added: "It was good to get Michael Dawson back playing again.
"He's been out for a long time with his Achilles injury and a few weeks back we wondered when he was ever going to play."

Manchester City defender Kolo Toure thinks his team-mate Emmanuel Adebayor has been unfairly criticised for his behaviour in Saturday's 4-2 win against Arsenal.
The Togo international appeared to stamp on Gunners star Robin van Persie and, after scoring the third goal against his former club, raced the length of the pitch to celebrate his feat in front of the visiting fans.
Toure, who also left Arsenal for Eastlands in the summer, was quoted in The Sun as saying: "I am astounded because he has received blows from all the Arsenal players.
"Even though he was the first to go and salute them in the tunnel, even those who had an affinity with him didn't want to shake his hand. For me that is unacceptable.
"There was a very difficult moment with the supporters. At the start of the game they were whistling at him as if he never brought anything to the club. It was hard.
"I don't caution him for his gesture although I tried to stop him and I also have apologised to the fans. It's not to them that he should do this.
"I told him that this was not a good thing and he apologised. The problem is that they booed him while they applauded me. It was a reaction of pride. The whole world could have a reaction like that."

Blackburn Rovers defender Michel Salgado has spoken of the possibility of his former Real Madrid team-mate David Beckham sealing a loan move to Ewood Park in January.
The 33-year-old Spaniard, who has joined Rovers on a two-year deal, played alongside Beckham for four years at the Bernabeu.
Beckham is set to leave LA Galaxy on loan in January and is believed to prefer a return to the Premier League in the hope that he can earn a place in Fabio Capello's England squad for next summer's World Cup finals in South Africa.
"I spoke to him last week when he was with the national team," revealed Salgado. "He asked me if I had signed here at Blackburn Rovers for two years. I said I had signed and I live in Manchester in Alderley Edge.
"He said to me, 'Oh, I have lived there, it is a fantastic place'.
"He said, 'Congratulations for going to Blackburn Rovers because it is a historic club. You have a great man as coach, Sam (Allardyce)'."
Asked about the possibility of Beckham moving to Ewood Park on loan, Salgado added: "I have to speak with him and the club, but maybe we will have to pay him, all the players! I will try!"

The Football Association has charged Manchester City striker Emmanuel Adebayor with violent conduct and improper conduct following the Togo international's erratic behaviour during Saturday's 4-2 win against Arsenal.
Adebayor caught former team-mate Robin van Persie in the face with his boot and, after scoring City's third goal, raced 90 metres to celebrate his goal in front of the Gunners fans.
Objects were thrown towards Adebayor by some away fans who were infuriated by the forward's actions.
Last season, Arsenal supporters had accused the 25-year-old of not trying hard enough in some games following his attempts in the summer of 2008 to seal a transfer away from the Emirates Stadium.
A statement on the FA's official website read: "Under the fast-track disciplinary process, Adebayor has been charged with violent conduct following an incident with Robin van Persie, which resulted in the Arsenal player receiving facial injuries.
"Referee Mark Clattenburg has advised the FA that he did not see this incident, but has confirmed that had he done so, he would have sent Adebayor off for violent conduct. The player has until 6pm on Wednesday evening to respond to the charge.
"Adebayor has also been charged with improper conduct following his actions when turning and running the full length of the pitch to celebrate in front of the Arsenal supporters after scoring.
"The Greater Manchester Police have written to the FA with their views on this incident. A separate date will now be arranged for a commission to consider Adebayor's goal celebration."
In the aftermath of Saturday's controversial game, Adebayor had said: "I don't know what I have done wrong to get banned.
"I heard that a steward was injured and I regret that. I have apologised to Robin van Persie. It was silly to run up in front of the Arsenal fans. But these people had been insulting me all game.
"I didn't plan it, not at all. I didn't even know that I would score. The way things were going from the warm-up, at the end it came into my head."

The 25-year-old Republic of Ireland international has overcome a sticky start to life in the Premier League with the Potters to become an integral part of Tony Pulis' side.
The former Sheffield Wednesday midfielder was a fringe member of the squad during the first half of last season but played his way into the starting line-up during their successful fight against relegation.
"I've worked hard since I arrived here and it is great to have been rewarded with a new deal," he told the club's official website.
"It has taken a week or two to iron out, but I never had to think about it really.
"I want to play at the highest level and achieve as much as I can and I feel I can fulfil my ambitions here at Stoke."
Speaking about his time on the sidelines last season, he added: "It was obviously disappointing at the time because I wanted to show I can play at this level, but I kept my head up and worked as hard as I could and fortunately I got my chance and I have taken it.
"Hopefully I can keep improving here under the gaffer and retain my spot in the starting eleven."

TURIN, 9 September 2009 - South Africa is near, within reach. The Italian squad needs to bring home just one more point from their match in Dublin against Ireland, whose coach watched tonight's game from the stands at the Olimpico in Turin. Thanks to the four-point lead in the group stage with just two games left in the qualifying round, two possible results would work for the Azzurri when playing on the other side of the Channel, and if things don't go well for them, there is always the Cyprus safety net. A victory in Parma would guarantee first place in the group and thus the ticket to the 2010 World Cup. It's an ideal situation, due to a finally convincing win by the Azzurri (2-0) over Bulgaria, courtesy of Grosso and Iaquinta. Lippi made a good decision by placing Pirlo at the top of the midfield diamond and the team reaped the fruits of that choice tonight. Throwing in Marchisio and Grosso (unlike he did in Tbilisi), proved to be a brilliant decision. Of course, there is always Buffon, who when the score was 1-0, he pulled one of his star saves—one of those that seems too good to be true. Italy did not let their guard down when it came to goaltending and the Italian net has been undefeated for the last three matches.
GROSSO IS IN — Wearing the world champion shirt that brought back memories of Germany in front of his new public at the Olimpico that hasn't seen him play for Juventus yet, Grosso gave Italy the lead with a powerful left volley, finishing in a calibrated pass from Pirlo. It was the fourth goal with the National side for the former Lyon player and it marked his role tonight as a sprinter for the Azzurri, who were able to play with a good tempo and quality moves thanks to a strong midfield core. Iaquinta could have sealed the deal for the Azzurri but missed a goal on an empty net after an assist from Gilardino. The first 25 minutes of play were a monologue from the Italians.
FIERCE BUFFON — After that, Bulgaria pushed hard by surprise and unexpectedly. However, Buffon looked like a stuntman in an American film. The Italian keeper—one of the seven Juventus players in tonight's starting line-up—dove to the left to deny a very close call by Stiliyan Petrov and sent out a ball that was claimed as a goal by the Bulgarians. It was a miracle to match the one in Tbilisi. Just like a goal. Bulgaria insisted with another cannonball from Stiliyan Petrov that went out on the side. That was all.
ITALY CLOSED THE ACCOUNT — The Azzurri actually understood that it wasn't a good idea to hold onto a narrow advantage until the final minutes because one never knows, and they eagerly tried for a second goal. Iaquinta made everyone nervous when he had a bad header right by the goal, but he was always there. He was the one who gave Italy the final lead (2-0) after a move with Gilardino, the fifth midfielder for the Azzurri today, with a heavy presence like he had against Ireland. At the half, the Italian squad was sent to the locker-room amidst applause from the fans, something they weren't used to anymore.
HARMLESS BULGARIANS — The Bulgarians were now in control, but they didn't pose much of a threat to the Italians. The Azzurri only feared a header from Sarmov and a long-distance shot from Bojinov, another former Juventus player. The only bad news for Italy came with Cannavaro's booking; he will have to sit out the match against Ireland. However, it was only a small spot in an encouraging performance, as clearly stated by the chants from the 'pro-Del Piero' fans. Italy won and played well—which is something we wanted to say for a while now—and tagged the Bulgarian team as the first squad eliminated in the qualifying stage. South Africa is just around the corner.
from our correspondent Riccardo Pratesi



