In a household with multiple PCs and users, it can be a bit of a pain to share USB peripherals without losing track of who left what where. If your wireless router doesn't have a print/storage server built in, consider Belkin's Network USB Hub. This simple device combines a regular USB hub with a print/storage server and lets you network up to five USB devices through a router. This allows you to corral your peripherals -- external hard drives and printers and the like -- in one central area and potentially access them wirelessly while roaming about your home. The Network USB Hub lives up to Belkin's claim of simplicity and ease-of-use; we think it's worth the AU$199 price tag.
We haven't seen a similar device cross our desks yet, mainly down to wireless USB not being ratified in Australia yet. But don't confuse the two technologies -- wireless USB hubs establish a direct point-to-point contact between the hub and the adapter that's plugged into your PC. Belkin's Network USB hub on the other hand connects your PC to USB devices over a local network, but tricks the PC into thinking it's making a direct USB connection to those devices. While Belkin's device requires you to plug a network cable in to work, if you have a wireless router this will enable you to have a wireless print server wherever you can maintain a wireless signal.
The Belkin Network USB Hub's design is the essence of simplicity. The all-black hub is 165mm square and stands 6mm tall; it looks like a short, black version of Apple's AirPort Extreme Base Station (the Extreme Base Station does offer one USB port for a printer or hard drive, to be fair. But just one). On the back edge you'll find a single Ethernet port, three USB ports, a power port, and a reset button. On the front edge reside two additional USB ports. And that's the entire product. It ships with a power cable and an Ethernet cable.
Setting up the Network USB Hub was also simple: connect the hub's Ethernet port to a WAN port on your wireless router and power it up. If you've enabled DHCP on your router, you won't have to manually set up the hub, but if you haven't, you'll need to enter information such as the hub's Ethernet code (from the hub's underside). Then all you have to do is install the included Control Center software on each PC that will be accessing the hub (you won't be able to use the hub if you don't install the software). We should note that the Hub works with Windows XP and Vista PCs, while a Mac OSX driver should be available on Belkin's website.
The Control Center shows you all the hubs on your network and the devices that are attached to each hub. You'll be able to see whether a certain device is connected to the PC you're using, as well as information such as the type of device, whether you've set it up to autoconnect, and the device's status. Devices connected to the hub can only be used by one user at a time. If you want to connect to a device that's in use, you can send a request to the current user, who can accept or deny your request. You can also configure the hub so that all connections are automatically established when you start up the Control Center, though again, you won't be able to make a connection to a device that's in use by someone else. We connected a flash thumbdrive, a hard drive, and an inkjet printer to our test hub and were able to use all three devices without problems. We played music off the hard drive, transferred files between our laptop and the flash drive, and printed several documents -- all wirelessly and from the living room, while the devices all sat next to our hub, installed in the back bedroom.
One issue we ran into while trying to connect to installed USB devices was that software firewalls can get in the way. Belkin's help centre acknowledges this issue and provides step-by-step configurations for several third-party firewalls that will allow the connections to be made.
In the included literature, Belkin warns that certain types of USB devices may not be compatible, including TV tuners and Webcams. If you've connected such a device, a warning will show up in the control center. The Network USB Hub can support up to 16 connections at once, but be aware that a single device does not always equal a single connection. Multifunction printers, for example, often require up to four connections (one for each function).
Belkin backs the Network USB Hub with a three-year warranty.
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El Nino
16/04/2008, 10:16 PM
rating
6/10
Would it work if you used a USB to Parallel adapter for connecting an old printer?
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schwerbel
31/03/2008, 10:30 PM
rating
5/10
works fine with most devices but i cant find a compatible 56k modem. (both USrobotics and microlink modems dont work).
Pros: works with most devices
Cons: some devices just dont work for no apparant reason
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Anthony
09/01/2008, 01:00 PM
rating
9/10
A really good device, probably the best, and most reliable and practical peripheral device I have purchased. Works well, works every time and easy to set-up. Just what I needed to complete my Home Office Network. I have 3 x Printers attached and an External Hard-Drive, everything works every time. I am very happy.
Pros: Works well, works every time, very reliable. Compact.
Cons: No complaints at all.
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canberra_photographer
20/12/2007, 02:07 PM
rating
5/10
Any one think it looks like a metalic colours Apple Airport Extreme? And given that the Airport Extreme Gigabit has a USB port which can support USB hubs and over 100 devices, I think I know which I prefer.
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