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To: Cogito who wrote (83562)7/2/2009 1:42:02 PM
From: FJB  Read Replies (2) of 213182
 
Google news search came up with this for routers and D-Link.

nytimes.com

Excerpt:

This month, D-Link, the networking equipment company, will offer a mashup that nobody’s ever tried before: wireless router + home backup hard drive + digital picture frame. That, in a nutshell, is the D-Link DIR-685 ($300 list price).

The 685’s heart is in the right place. Its inventors have noticed that our high-tech homes are becoming cluttered with network-related gadgets and their associated cable creep. As long as people are going to buy all these different network gadgets, D-Link figures, why not combine them into one?

It’s the right idea. Unfortunately, D-Link is the wrong company to make it a reality.

First, the good news: once you get the 685 set up, it works very well indeed. It broadcasts your Internet connection wirelessly — a fast, strong Wi-Fi signal (802.11n). This single router turned my entire house into a Wi-Fi hot spot, thanks to its ability to blast through floors and walls. I was even getting three bars of signal (out of a possible four) all the way upstairs.

Every conceivable home router feature is on this machine’s configuration screens: port forwarding, Application Rules, individual Web site blocking, a sophisticated firewall, UPnP, Multicast Streams, Wake on LAN, users and groups, network access lists, scheduled lockouts, logs, security formats like WPA and WEP, remote management and much, much more. (And no, I’m not going to define those. If you’re among the geeks D-Link is apparently courting with this router, you know perfectly well what those things are.)

But you can get a much less expensive router with those features. The 685’s selling point is that it has some unique tricks up its sleeve.

One of them is a tiny (3.2 inch) color screen. It’s useful for inspecting the router’s settings, but it can also display dozens of Internet information widgets: weather, New York Times headlines, stocks, sports scores, stocks, Twitter posts and — delightfully — photos from your Flickr or Facebook accounts. It’s as if your router is now a Chumby, if you remember that desktop gadget.
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