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 ...
The Good: A networking server for USB devices, such as printers and scanners. The Bad: It requires a little effort to run, and fiddling with TCP and UDP ports. It also supports USB 1.1 only, with no ...
Networking access to a USB device can be tricky, not really, its actually pretty easy, but it deeply saddens me to have to leave a certain computer on all the time just to have constant access to the ...
Keyspan, a US-based maker of connection devices for computers, showed off a device at the CES show in Las Vegas this week that lets PCs and Apple Mac computers access USB devices over a network. The ...
The USB 3.0 ports can deliver better performance than USB 2.0 ports. Most routers struggle to power large, power-hungry HDDs ...
Hi guys,<BR>We have some devices in the office which are not networkable and we've usually either hosted them on one machine and then shared them, or connected to a Keyspan USB server. The latter ...
I had a server that was crashing a couple times a week. Sometimes before the crash I noticed everything got real laggy although none of the system metric's showed a high load, swapping, or any other ...
As someone who extensively writes about all things Windows, I find myself installing the Windows operating system quite often. Most of the time, these installations are geared toward setting up ...
Pros: Connects printers, scanners, AIOs, and other USB devices to a network. More versatile than a print server. Cons: As tested, only one computer can connect to a given printer, scanner, or AIO at a ...
They certainly took their time doing it, but the folks at Keyspan have finally churned out a follow-up to their original USB Server, offering much of the same and one notable improvement with their ...