Cisqo systems have great and reliable routers for great prices.
The average price range for an 8 port wireless router is $150.00 to $200.00. If the router is purchased online you may also have to pay for the cost of shipping.
Someone would use a 8 port gigabit switch to increase the router speed and to conserve energy and save desktop save. As it has 8 ports one can also connect a console and media player.
You only need one ethernet connection on the laptop for DSL. If you need to connect to other computers on an ethernet network then you can buy a 4 or 8 port Wireless/Lan router. Plug the Broadband box into the router, laptop into the router. And if you need more connections then you can buy a 4, 8 or 16 port ethernet switch and plug the router into that and then plug the other computers into the switch and there you go.
Typically yes if you wire it directly into the router and your PC has a RJ45/8 pin network card/port, not a 4 or 6 pin phone/modem port. Even wireless should be ok if you have the right wireless adapter for your PC.
Depends on how many switches each router takes. You need a router to connect all the other routers, and then enough switches to make 81. For example, you can use 6 16 port routers to connect the computers and 1 8 port router to connect those routers together
Yes, you can daisychain multiple smaller hubs, or buy a router.
Yes, and you can connect many more devices. The router should have at least 4 ethernet ports to connect to. And/or you can connect wireless also. If you have more then 4 wired devices then you can use a 4, 8, or 16 port ethernet Switch to connect to the Router. Myself I have 3 desktops (wired), 3 wireless and 1 wired laptops, an X-Box 360 (wired), a Wii (wireless), a BlueRay player (wireless) and a Brother laser printer (wireless) connected to the router. (1 desktop, 1 laptop and the X-Box are hooked to the Router and the rest of the wired devices are connected to an 8 port ethernet Switch which is connected to the Router.)
The port that is connected can either be COM1 or COM2 depending on the communication port.
You have to use port forwarding.By "hosting" you mean probably running a web server. A www (http) server listens to incoming connections on a TCP port number 80. Therefore you must configure on your router a port forward, which will open port 80 on the router and forward all traffic to port 80 on your "hosting" computer. It will act as sort of an "extension", a peephole through which the world will see this specific service on your computer, which is otherwise hidden behind a "fence" (router).This is done by specifying:- which machine's port is to be forwarded (computer's IP address on the LAN)- which port on that machine will be forwarded- on which port of the router it will be forwarded- what type of protocol will be used (TCP, UDP or both). Sometimes a router won't allow both, then the forwarding must be done twice, once for TCP and second time for UDP. For a webserver TCP is enough.If you want to serve other services, like FTP or whatever, you must forward the ports used by this service. For example, for FTP it will be ports 20 & 21, for SSH - 22, for ECHO (ping response) - port 8, for secure http - port 443 etc.Search the internet for a "list of known TCP/IP ports" to find out more.
Someone can purchase Frasier Season 8 on DVD from Amazon where it is available to buy for ÕóëŠÕŠë£33.94. One can also buy it used from Amazon Marketplace or from eBay.
To connect from Host 1 to Router 1 using HyperTerminal, first, ensure that the correct serial cable is connected between Host 1's COM port and Router 1's console port. Open HyperTerminal on Host 1 and create a new connection, selecting the appropriate COM port. Configure the connection settings, typically using 9600 baud rate, 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, and no flow control. Finally, click "Connect" to establish the console session, allowing you to interact with Router 1's command line interface.