Forum Discussion
- CharlesMcCoolNew PosterWonder if this will be the modem for the new bird?
- Hi Gwalk,
Thank you for your interest. This modem is not a consumer based product and is designed for enterprise customers. At this time there are no plans for a new consumer modem model.
- Chris - Gwalk900Honorary Alumnus
That is what I was wondering too.
Dual band, dual LAN ports, router or switch.
- Gwalk900Honorary Alumnus
Oh Drat !!!!
It had some nice features .... dual LAN would lend itself more to the Consumer than Enterprise side I would think.
Thanks for the Reply Chris.
- C0RR0SIVEAssociate ProfessorKinda figured it was a Business or Enterprise only unit...
- C0RR0SIVEAssociate ProfessorHughes tends to keep dual LAN to enterprise only systems... Tends to be useful for failover networks, where if one router or firewall fails, another automatically takes over for the network. Don't really see dual LAN being useful for consumers as most have a router already.
- Gwalk900Honorary Alumnus
I was thinking of the "I have two computers and don't need wireless" type of user that doesn't need the "complication" of setting up a router.
- C0RR0SIVEAssociate ProfessorThose users are sadly few in number, too few to justify putting the circuitry for the second NIC onto an HT1100 or any other consumer model.
- Alana Lynn AndrNew Member
BUT WHAT ABOUT THOSE OF US WHO AREN'T ALLOWED TO HAVE/USE ROUTERS? BESIDES, WITH ALL THE PROBLEMS I'VE HAD TO CALL ON; THE FIRST THING THEY ASK ME ABOUT IS THE "ROUTER" I'M USING!
I JUST FIGURED: "WHY EVEN START ANY MORE TROUBLES?"
OKAY, "DUMB QUESTION TIME": JUST WHAT IS A ROUTER ANYWAY?
- C0RR0SIVEAssociate ProfessorA router is a device that separates two different networks... Why would you not be allowed to have a router? Anyone is allowed to have them, they go from extremely cheap and climsy, to very expensive high end ones with a lot of bells and whistles.
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