As an example, we used a simple point-to-point Ethernet bridge from a house to a barn about 300 meters away, with a DVR and several cameras to monitor the cows. For this purpose, they worked excellently from the start. The only downside is that these things are like a swiss army knife for nets from what I understand. Apparently they have about half a dozen additional functions that they can potentially do for you to act as an extender and a few other things that I haven't really looked into. The only reason it's bad is that the device looks complicated as hell when you take everything out of the box. The modules themselves have a small segmented display that shows a cryptic summary of what mode and function they are in. There are a few tiny buttons marked with the same letter, not just one, but two ethernet ports (not 100% sure what the second one is for). There's nothing intuitive about that. You then unfold the instructions, which are a large folded sentence of fine print and barely understandable English with poor grammar. God help you if you really must try to use the instructions (like I said, it's already set up for our needs). like a simple bridge right out of the box). Some manuals for additional functions show that the device is completely disassembled down to the circuit board, no idea why. I won't even try to guess what they're getting at. So far, their bridging function is working well. We only used the Ethernet port labeled "LAN" on both devices and it behaved as if it was a Cat5 end-to-end block, which is great. This device came with Power over Ethernet injectors as the only way to power the devices. I can see they accept DC power from the jack but the wall wart power supplies were not included. It is in order. They added some zip ties to help with installation which is a nice touch too. Devices throw out their own SSIDs on regular Wi-Fi frequencies, which I can safely turn off, but the extra SSIDs on the list don't bother anyone here, and I'm NOT touching on these ten web interfaces. a foot bar when I don't need it (it looks as sketchy as a paper guide). Overall they do what we need at a low price (so far), it's almost unfair to drop a star just for the complexity of the other features and poor instructions, but it's a matter of usability. Любой, кто хочет сделать больше, чем простой мост, который мы сделали, должен будет разобраться с этим, и я считаю справедливым сказать это, потому что меня оттолкнули плохие инструкции и неясные функции портов и кнопок, и я я инженер-программист с опытом работы in the web. So if you need a very basic bridge to make it appear like you have a 1000 foot (or longer) piece of Ethernet cable, all I can say is that it came out of the box with no problems. If you do anything else with it, be prepared to rack your brains over some poor instructions in the fine print written by someone whose native language is definitely not English. I have a feeling the person who designed this is probably a genius BUT he or she thinks like a computer and not like a normal person just trying to solve simple network problems at home. YMMV the price is really good so good luck!
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