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Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge
 
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Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge

Other products by Linksys
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (228 customer reviews) More about this product

In Stock.
Ships from and sold by ANTOnline.
9 new from $84.68

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this item with Optical Cable 6 ft.

Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge + Optical Cable 6 ft.
Price For Both: $84.84

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  • This item: Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by ANTOnline.
    $7.97 shipping.

  • Optical Cable 6 ft.

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    Ships from and sold by Eforcity.
    $2.98 shipping.


Technical Details

  • Product Type - Wireless Music Bridge. Please note, this product is not compatible with Vista.
  • Warranty - 3 Years Limited
  • Headphone jack connector for powered speakers
  • Easy Setup Wizard for configuration
  See more technical details

Product Details

  • Item Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • ASIN: B000E5E6KG
  • Item model number: WMB54G
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (228 customer reviews)
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: January 9, 2006

Product Description

Amazon.com Product Description

You're having a party, but you don't have the time it will take to burn a disc of your favorite digital tunes. This is where the Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge comes in. By letting you wirelessly stream audio files from your PC to your stereo or other speaker system, no matter which music service you use, the Wireless-G Music Bridge gives you all the convenience of digital music with the sound of high-performance stereo.


Toss out the cords and wirelessly stream music with the Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge. View larger.
With the Wireless-G Music Bridge, you can send whatever music your PC is playing--whether it's from media players, games, Internet radio, or MP3 files--through your home network and to your stereo system. If you're running a wireless (802.11b and 802.11g) network, the Music Bridge will send your music to your stereo with no need for any additional cables. Simply connect the Wireless-G Music Bridge to your entertainment system via the included RCA cable, and you'll be ready to start cranking the tunes. Alternately, you can also use standard 10/100 Ethernet cabling to connect to your network.


If you have a 5.1-channel surround sound system, the Wireless-G Music Bridge includes software that creates a virtual 5.1-channel sound in your PC, so that you can take full advantage of your stereo system. The Wireless-G Music Bridge also lets you choose what audio from your PC you want to play over your audio system. For example, you can choose to send music but not email alerts or other PC tones. Or you may want to keep the alert tones streaming. It's entirely up to you.

An easy-to-use setup wizard will guide you through the configuration so that you can be up and running in no time. The Wireless-G Music Bridge supports 128-bit WEP encryption to ensure a secure connection and is compatible with wireless 802.11b and 802.11g standards.


What's in the Box
Wireless-G Music Bridge, Ethernet network cable, stereo RCA cable, power adapter, setup wizard CD-ROM, user guide on CD-ROM, and quick installation guide.



Product Description

The Linksys Wireless-G Music Bridge lets you bring the digital music streaming to or stored on your computer to your Home Entertainment Center, without running cables through the house. Using a wireless connection, the Music Bridge finally frees your digital music collection from those little computer speakers to play in full glory through your stereo or surround sound system. The Wireless-G Music Bridge sits by your home stereo and connects to it using standard consumer electronics cables. Then it connects to your home network by Wireless-G wireless networking, or if you prefer, it can be connected via standard 10/100 Ethernet cabling. The included software creates a virtual sound system in your PC, which sends the audio output of any application to the Music Bridge and the stereo system. Use your favorite media player to play your music, and listen in the comfort of the living room. Let the Linksys Wireless-G Music Bridge bring your digital music out into the living room for the whole family to enjoy

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Customer Reviews

Average Customer Rating
2.9 out of 5 stars (228 customer reviews)
5 star:
 (58)
4 star:
 (42)
3 star:
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
97 of 103 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Be warned - can be very tricky to set up, July 22, 2006
By Goldengate "Goldengate" (San Francisco, where else?) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)      
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First off, a little background... I consider myself fairly skilled at using computers.. I have been using them for 25+ years and have installed operating systems, configured routers, set up wireless networks, recovered systems from virus crashes, etc. Reading the below reviews I thought that while installing the music bridge might be a bit tricky, I could handle it.

WOW. I don't know where to begin. This product has the worst documentation I've ever seen, both in the box and online. I spent 10+ hours getting this to work on my system, plus another hour un-doing damage to my system registry after the Music Bridge driver conflicted with another driver in my system and caused a crash.

Having said that, I finally have it up and running and it is operating as promised, though using 100% of my CPU power and thus causing the computer to run very slowly.

Reading the support forum on the linksys site, the people that have the fewest problems installing this equipment are those that don't have routers. Ironically, though Linksys (and Cisco) are router companies, the instructions do not include the special steps that must be taken to re-configure your router so it will connect with the bridge.

Be warned - this is not plug and play and you may very well spend a lot of frustrating time trying to get it to work. Once it is working there are many idiosyncracies (eg having to close and open your music player to get it to play through the bridge) that you would not expect from a well-designed piece of hard/software.

This is a bargain for a reason - I'd suggest you spend a little more and find something better. Good luck!!
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42 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Usable in some situations, but not all, June 7, 2006
By Brian Cox "Brian" (New Jersey, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I bought the Music Bridge after reading all the reviews, positive and negative. Since I'm a technical guy I figured I would get it to work - and I did, eventually.

Here are the basics on this unit:
- It's a "virtual sound card". The sound card in your PC plays music through its speakers; this Bridge uses your WiFi network to "project" your soundcard wirelessly to a remote location.
- The first step is to connect it (using an ethernet cable) to your PC so that you can set it up (it needs to learn about your WiFi network) and plug in the power. Using the install CD to try to setup the unit seems useless; in reading the reviews it seems that the standard install process works for only 1 in 10, and I wasn't that one. The workaround is simple: look on the bottom of the unit. The IP address of the unit is listed there. Type it into your browser (I used IE) (type http://192.168.1.210 ). You'll be prompted for a username (leave it blank) and a password ("admin"). Bam! You're into the setup screen. If you've gotten this far you can probably figure out the setup steps (Change the Bridge's name to something that means to you. Change the Bridge's IP address and click "apply" which restarts the unit. I changed mine to 192.168.0.210 since my D-Link router's using the "0". Also setup SSID and WEP if you use it). To do this you don't absolutely have to have connectivity to the wireless router but if you do you can click "search" to make sure they're talking.
- Once you've setup your Bridge you can disconnect the ethernet cable and move the unit to the stereo. Turn the stereo on and make sure the red and white RCA cables are plugged into whatever input you tune your stereo to (sounds silly, but make sure).
- The rest of the work is done back on your PC by installing the "utility", the software that turns this contraption into the virtual sound card. If you used my workaround above you'll need to go back to the Autoplay of the CD and at the bottom in smaller letters it says "Install Utility". Once you've got the Utility up, click "scan for bridge" and hopefully (if your Bridge is close enough to your WiFi router) the bridge's name will appear. Give it 15-60 seconds after scanning. If it doesn't appear, unplug the bridge from the stereo and put the bridge next to router (eliminate the range issue) and try scanning again.
- Once you get the bridge listed in the table, select it and click "Connect" in the Utility and click "yes" in the popup. This should send sound to the Bridge. If the bridge is in another room and you don't want to crank up the volume, just open a media player on your PC after connecting and see if sound comes out of the PC - silence is good because the sound is being sent to the Bridge.
- You CAN toggle back and forth between the Bridge and your PC's sound card. Simply always open whatever media player you're using AFTER making your choice in the Utility. I.e.: click "Connect" (to the bridge), then open Media Player 10 which will cause MP10 to pick up the Bridge as the virtual sound card. If you want to come back to the PC sound card, CLOSE MP10 then click "Connect to PC's Speaker" then reopen MP10 - sound will now come from your PC's speakers.
- I found that with 40 ft and a couple walls between the router and the Bridge there was intermittent cutouts. Moving the router closer helped but still didn't make the signal perfect; in my non-technical opinion is that the radio in the Bridge is pretty weak.
Summary: My conclusion is that this approach to getting music from the PC to the stereo has too many points of failure - PC, WiFi, Bridge, Stereo - and if any one has an issue then you get no sound. I don't know what the alternative is for me yet, but I'm returning my device even though I got it tow work. It seems to me that for a single person with a PC, Router and Stereo close to each other - like in the same room but where running a wire isn't practical - this Bridge is a great, affordable solution with some minor issues related to setup. However, for a family living in a 2000+ sq.ft. home and with components scattered around the house on multiple floors, this Bridge may not be ideal.
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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than Airport Express, March 28, 2006
By aquarist (Mountain View, CA) - See all my reviews
I have Apple's Airport Express, which I use to send music from iTunes to my stereo. That is a great product, but Apple only sells music, not rent it. So I have been renting music from Yahoo. The problem was, there was no easy way to listen to Yahoo music through my stereo. There are products like Roku, but I was looking for something like Airport Express. Such a product now exists -- the Music Bridge.

The sound quality of the product is excellent. With Music Bridge, I can listen to iTunes as well as Yahoo music. The only small deficiency is that it is not easy to switch from listening through stereo to listening through PC speakers and vice versa. Typically you have to restart the media player after switching, which is not very convenient. Also note that there is a delay when listening through the stereo, so watching video on the PC's screen while listening to the audio through the stereo is not recommended; but this is a problem that Apple's Airport Express also has.

Setup wasn't hard at all. Before you can use the wireless Music Bridge you have to set it up. To set it up you have to physically connect the Music Bridge to your computer using the supplied ethernet cable. (This works because the MB has automatic crossover.) Then run the setup program on the supplied CD.

If the setup program fails to find the Music Bridge, as it did in my case, it may be because the physical network connection of your computer is disabled or not in the 192.168.1 range. The Music Bridge's physical connection is in this range by default, so unless your computer's physical connection is also in this range it won't be able to talk to the Music Bridge.

Here's how to fix the problem: Open Control Panel and double-click on Network Connections. Locate your Local Area Connection and right-click on it and select properties. In the Properties dialog scroll down till you see Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). Double-click on it. Select the "Use the following IP address" option. Then enter any IP address in the 192.168.1.xxx range, for example 192.168.1.135. Then click OK to close the dialog.

Rerun the setup program; it should be able to find the Music Bridge this time. You now have to enter the details of your wireless network, such as the network name or SSID. If you are using encryption you have to enter your security code. After entering these details you can disconnect the physical connection and use the Music Bridge wirelessly.

I did have to call Linksys tech support to figure out some of the above details, and I found the tech support to be very helpful and professional.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Works well, but setup is not easy
My wireless music bridge has been hooked up to my stereo system for two years now. It has been very reliable and the sound is excellent. Read more
Published 7 days ago by Charles F Ferrara

4.0 out of 5 stars Not Easy to Get Working With Vista But Gives Great Flexibility
Yes, this is a real pain to get going with Vista (why Linksys has not updated the software/firmware for this device by default is beyond me), but it is possible. Read more
Published 23 days ago by Joe S.

3.0 out of 5 stars Nice, but a bit skippy
Install was a bit more complicated than adding a new PC to the home network, but not as bad as some of the reviews I had read. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Robert Schilling

4.0 out of 5 stars no more wires to run to the stereo!
A very nice small gadget that cuts down on running wires to the larger stereo. did'nt run into to many problems like the rest of the reviews say, but I did run it threw another... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Scott Shingleton

4.0 out of 5 stars Great concept, not always versatile
Concept is great.
Would be better if there were an easy way to pipe video through the bridge as well. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Joshua Teitelbaum

1.0 out of 5 stars Don't waste your money
I have it installed on an HP laptop running Windows XP with Service Pack 3. Very unreliable software--have to reboot the bridge all the time. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Avid Reader

1.0 out of 5 stars 64 Bit Not Supported by Linksys and No Fix in Sight!
Not exactly an expert in PC's, but no slouch. Bought this around Christmas time to play music over our surround system. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Daran C. Janecek

1.0 out of 5 stars Horrible
This device sucks unless you are an IT genius. Horrible tech support. What a waste of time trying to get this thing to work
Published 3 months ago by Justin Alley

1.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to Set UP
Got this product from a frequent flyer rewards program..After 6 hours talking to support people I could barely understand, I was told that the system was not compatible with Vista... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Fred H. Swafford

1.0 out of 5 stars Abandon Hope, all ye who enter here
I have spent far too much time and far too many dollars trying to create wireless capability for playing music files stored on my PC through my home stereo. Read more
Published 3 months ago by William G. Smith

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Linksys WMB54G Wireless-G Music Bridge

Before you can use the wireless Music Bridge you have to set it up. To set it up you have to physically connect the Music Bridge to your computer using the supplied ethernet cable. Then run the setup program on the supplied CD. If the setup program ...

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Created on Feb 04, 2006, last edited on Feb 24, 2006.

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