Keyspan USB 2.0 Server for PC and Mac lets network users connect to remote USB devices including printers, scanners, digital cameras and flash-drive memory sticks over Ethernet and WiFi Keyspan is now ...
Your home may be set up for wireless internet, streaming, and file sharing, but try telling your printer that. If you're stuck lugging your laptop to a USB connection, a wireless print server may be a ...
Last time, I did a teardown on an eight-port wired GbE switch that refused to remain fully powered up. This time, a print server that refuses to fully power up at all goes under the magnifying glass.
An example of a dedicated server that has a specific function would be a printer server. Normally your printer is directly connected to the computer you are using and it can print only documents and ...
Is this possible? I have a laser printer, but it has only has usb output to the computer. However, i have a router that has a parallel print server port on it. Is there a cable or adapter that will ...
My most recent writeup, a teardown of an USB-interface wireless print server, reminded me that I'd long pondered giving print servers broader and more conceptual coverage here on the blog. By means of ...
Keyspan is now shipping the US$129 USB Server that connects USB devices to a Mac or PC via a wired or wireless Ethernet-based LAN. Akin to a USB print server, the USB Server enables attached USB ...
Stylish, Compact Devices Allow Multiple Users to Send Documents Directly from PC for Printing; Shared Fax and Scan Functions Supported Dubai, THE UAE, May 19, 2009 - D-Link Middle East, the end-to-end ...
The rise in mobile computing has forced most businesses to manage not just desktop workstations, but also notebooks, tablets and smartphones. Networking enables companies to share resources between ...
Dubai, UAE - December 16, 2004 - U.S. Robotics, the leading provider of Internet and connectivity solutions, has launched a new USB print server that enables homes with multiple PCs and small to ...
[sprite_tm] usually sends this stuff in, but I discovered that he took some time to hack on a Sweex router. The CPU happens to have an on-board usb host controller, so he added a few components. Now ...
Wow. I kinda wish I had $300 to burn and enough crap to put on this thing because a two-terabyte network drive with a built-in USB print server might look nice sitting betwixt my router and printer.
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