Tired Techie wrote:
> I think the Netgear Powerline might be the best solution for me. They
> have two models that seems appropriate - the XE103 and XE104. The
> XE104 has four network ports on the box and the XE103 has only one.
>
> For my needs, the XE103 would do the trick as I'm trying to get the
> signal to the other side of the house for a single computer. However,
> if I ever need to add another computer, does the XE103 work with a
> configuration of three XE103's?
>
> The XE104 man page says they support up to four XE104's and the XE103
> is silent on this. I called Netgear and the person on the phone was
> useless.
>
> Anyone know for sure?
>
> Thanks.
>
> - Tired Techie -
>
> PS. Thanks to Peter Pan for pointing me in this direction.
Can't say for sure on that one, but I have 4 XE102's (and 2 XE104's)... They
coexist fine... They basically use home networking, and you have to name the
network you want to use (like an ssid, i have one named PP-102 and another
named PP-104).... From the docs (and testing) they can coexist just fine,
however they use different passwords/encoding and trying to mix them (IE the
104 talking to the 102's and reverse), didn't work, so I just have two
different powerline devices hooked to my wap/router and can connect to
either from wherever...
one other device you may want to look at is their wireless access point
http://www.netgear.com/Products/Powe...s/WGXB102.aspx
Plug one into the router and wall, then wherever you want to expand wireless
coverage, just plug another in (pretty cool, using one now, does cost about
$50 more tho)