ADATA Technology has proudly introduced the DashDrive Air AV200 portable wireless access point. Measuring 60mm x 50mm x 25mm, the device enables you to wirelessly share music, videos and data from SD cards and USB flash drives across all your devices on the same network. It is compatible with Windows, OS X, iOS and Android operating systems. The DashDrive Air AV200 uses FTP file server/ HTTP Streaming protocol to provide simple 2-way data transfers. You can also use it as a portable wireless router that can connect to up to 5 devices at the same time. The ADATA DashDrive Air AV200 will be available for £44.99 ($75). [techPowerUp]
Tag Archives: Access Point
Free Skype WiFi hits Ireland and the UK through Wicoms, steps up the quality of public hotspots
Let's face it: many free WiFi hotspots are tacked on as bullet point items to get customers into a shop or hotel, without much concern for quality high enough that it keeps visitors coming back. Wicoms is hoping that a strategy to offer free Skype WiFi in Ireland and the UK will reverse that neglect. Instead of leaving stores to go through carrier partnerships or devise their own solutions, the partnership has stores pick up a £49 Wicoms router and commit to either a £10 ($16) monthly rate or prepaid brackets of £49 ($79) for six months and £95 ($153) for a year. The aim isn't just to provide a more consistent level of performance -- the Skype deal also provides a ready-made sign-in process, whether or not visitors have Skype accounts, as well as someone to turn to for help. While temptations exist to go with earlier alternatives, Skype and Wicoms are giving away the router during October to help sweeten the pot, even for those outlets that drop the Skype WiFi solution later on. Let's hope the hotspots work well enough on the public-facing side; we could all use a few more shelters from low data caps and oversaturated access points.
Filed under: Networking
Free Skype WiFi hits Ireland and the UK through Wicoms, steps up the quality of public hotspots originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Oct 2012 22:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | CommentsAmped Wireless adds a dual-band access point to its range of super-strength networking gear
Amped Wireless has a single-minded purpose of eliminating blackspots in your WiFi coverage with a range of routers, adapters and repeaters to pump out 600mW of internet where you need it most. Now that it's done adding dual-band technology to its lineup of products, it's busting out a similarly-equipped access point that promises to add a further 7,500 square feet of coverage to your home. Capable of automatically setting itself up on your home (or office) network, it's packing the same USB port for storage that its recently revamped brothers have seen. It'll be available at the end of September for $170, and you can find a high-powered collection of words and punctuation arranged in the form of a press release included after the break.
Filed under: Networking
Amped Wireless adds a dual-band access point to its range of super-strength networking gear originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | CommentsYou’ve heard of the Child Catcher? Meet the WiFi Snatcher
Remember the Olympic ban on WiFi hotspots to ensure the games' corporate sponsors could sell you back access at a premium? The threat to seize or eject anyone caught using such gear seemed hollow -- after all, how could you be found in a crowd of 90,000? It turns out, LOCOG have employed WiFi police, chasing down unauthorized signals with their big red detectors. Although we should give them some credit -- you'll certainly see them coming from a mile away.
[Image Credit: Sadao Turner, Twitter]
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablet PCs, Wireless
You've heard of the Child Catcher? Meet the WiFi Snatcher originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Aug 2012 08:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | CommentsLondon bans wireless access points, joy, kittens from the Olympics
If you thought the list of banned items at the Olympic Games couldn't get any longer, now the IOC is gunning for that mobile hotspot in your pocket. The prohibited list includes all of the things you'd expect (weapons, alcohol, toxic materials) but also this:
"Personal / private wireless access points and 3G hubs (smart devices such as Android phones, iPhone and tablets are permitted inside venues, but must not be used as wireless points to connect multiple devices)"
Probably best to leave that router at home and make sure you only activate your smartphone's hotspot when you're hidden in a crowd, folks.
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablet PCs, Wireless
London bans wireless access points, joy, kittens from the Olympics originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 03:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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