Yes. Any machine not capable of 802.11N will default to whatever speed it's capable of receiving at. 802.11N is backward compatible with the slower standards.
But I think that if you have one device connected at less than n, such as a/b/g, an additional n-device will also only connect at that slower speed and not n.
But I think that if you have one device connected at less than n, such as a/b/g, an additional n-device will also only connect at that slower speed and not n.
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