As part of its in-depth review of 802.11g routers, PC Magazine looks at the latest incarnation of Apple's AirPort.As usual, Apple sets its products apart visually from the competition. In this case, the Apple AirPort Extreme router resembles a large, collapsed marshmallow. Although the AirPort lacks many of the features that other wireless routers in our roundup have, it certainly serves its intended purpose and target audience in providing basic and secure wireless network access for Apple laptop and desktop systems. The system is Wi-Fi compliant and can support Windows PCs.
Initial Configuration and Documentation 
Apple provides a thorough documentation bookleta welcome rarity these daysand we encountered no difficulties with the largely automated AirPort Setup Assistant application. Theres an equally easy-to-use Airport Admin utility in case you need to configure the product directly.
Management and Features 
The AirPort base station lacks a lot of advanced features, such as a DHCP server, SPI firewall, or highly configurable NAT, but it will still satisfy most users. It does include DHCP bridging capabilities.
Security 
This newest iteration of the AirPort includes WPA and WEP security. But youll have to rely on third-party applications for Web filtering or parental controls.
Performance
Mac OS X is not compatible with NetIQs performance-testing application Chariot, and we were therefore unable to measure the AirPorts throughput. Also, we could make no performance assumptions based on the AirPorts wireless chipset because Apple declined to provide this information.
To read the complete PC Magazine review of the latest generation of wireless hubs, click here.