
FAST ETHERNET SWITCH 8PORT
|  | $20.23Availability: 169 In Stock Condition: NewSKU: TE100-S8 UPC: 710931204186
Shipping: $8.91 Ships in 1-2 business days |
| Product DescriptionUSB 2.0 Bluetooth Adapter allows you to make short-range wireless connections between your computer and Bluetooth-enabled devices. This Bluetooth v2.0 utilizes Enhanced Data Rate (EDR) to allow for data rates up to 3Mbps. The Bluetooth adapter can easily connect to your Bluetooth-enabled devices from up to 10 meters away.
Customer ReviewsReviewed on 2008-07-19      Works Great Have had no problems with this item. Didn't come with mounting screws, but does have the slots for 2 screws. I had to open it up and break off the plastic tabs to get the screws to fit though. Great for the price. |  | Reviewed on 2008-05-21      Quality product Before we switched to AT&T U-verse last year, my family used Charter's digital cable to access the internet for a good five to ten years. In all those years, I watched my dad go through device after device (routers, wireless receivers, switchers) getting frustrated with why all the brands we were trying never seemed to work consistently. And they were top brands (Linksys was one of them).
The main problem was that the device would work, then it would stop. We'd reset it, it worked again, then it stopped. Eventually, he would give it to me to see if I could get it to work until it quit working altogether. Now, I don't know if it was product quality or the fact that they were getting really hot (which, considering information is traveling faster causing the devices to get hotter causing companies to rethink heat dissipation, is a rather redundant excuse). All I knew was that, when I started buying my own equipment, I was going to take serious consideration into what brands I was going to buy.
I owned a 4-port Linksys switcher I got from my grandfather for a while until, suddenly, it could, only, handle three connections at any one time. Whether it was three computers, two computers and an uplink to another switcher, or a computer, an uplink, and a network device, it just wouldn't handle a fourth device. Sometime around March (2008), I started looking around. Trendnet was on my dad's list of top five network device manufacturers. And, with the price being low enough, I figured it was worth the money. Two months later, I have no regrets. This is a quality device for an at-home, small network (small as in less than ten network-able devices).
The device could use the extra lights that let you know connection status, connection speed, etc. But, if you think of this as a reduced-visuals solution to a high-tech, low-priced device, it's worth every cent. |  |
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