A router forms part of an internet network by allowing all the devices in a building to connect to the internet. A modem brings the internet service from your provider into your home or office. This data is then sent to a router which forwards the internet connection to all your WiFi devices such as laptops and smartphones. This internet connection consists of data packets such as e-mails or web pages which contain an IP network address telling the router the end destination of the data. Routers in homes and small offices simply forward IP packets between home computers and the internet. Large businesses have more powerful and complex enterprise routers designed to send data over larger geographical areas called WANs (Wide Area Network) so data packets may need to be passed between several routers until it reaches its final IP destination
EN 61000-4-2:2009, NBTC, CITC, EN 301 489-1 V2.2.3, EN 61000-3-3:2013 + A1:2019 + A2:2021, Kenya, SIRIM, RCM, EN 55035:2017 + A11:2020, UKCA, EN 301 511 V12.5.1, IEC 62368-1:2018, EN 301 908-13 V13.2.1, EN
NBTC, IEC 61000-4-4, IEC 61000-4-2, IEC 61000-4-6, IEC 61000-4-5, EN 300 328, UL 62368-1, EN 301 489-1/17, IEC 61000-4-8, EN 301 893, IEC 60601, EN 55032/35, KC, EN 61000-6-2/-6-4, MIC, E mark E1, CISPR 32,
EN 301 908-13 V13.1.1, IEEE 802.3, EN 301 489-1 V2.2.3, EN 61000-3-3:2013+A1:2019+A2:2021, EN 61000-4-4:2012, EN IEC 61000-3-2:2019+A1:2021, UKCA, IEC 62368-1:2018, CB, EN 61000-4-5:2014+A1:2017, EN 61000-4
UL 62368-1, EN 60068-2-1, EN 60068-2-30, EN 55032 Class B, EN 55035, EN 61000-6-3, EN 60068-2-27, UKCA, CE, EN 60068-2-14, EN 61000-6-2, EN 60068-2-2, EN 61131-2 and EN 60068-2-6, IEC/EN 62368