ATNEDCVH USB 2.0 WiFi Print Server, Wireless LAN Print Share Server for USB Printers,RAW IPP Print Protocol 10/100Mbps USB Network Print Server…
₹599.00
- 【 Wired And Wireless Printing 】 You can configure the Wi-Fi connection between the print server and your LAN on any computer / mobile phone / tablet of your LAN. Then to share a printer wirelessly for all users in your LAN to realize wireless sharing printing. Or connect the print server to a router or a switch in your LAN with a network cable to realize wired sharing printing
- 【Share a printer on two different LANs at the same time】 After do some network settings on the server, your printer can be shared by LANs of two different network segments via the server. In theory, it can be shared by a maximum of 3 LANs of different network segments at the same time. The Wifi connect to one Lan network. The LAN1 port connect to another. The LAN2 port connect to the third.
- 【Wide Compatibility】 Except for printers with special languages of some brands, it is compatible with almost all the USB printers (PCL, PS, GDI), such as inkjet printers, laser printers, needle printers, All-In-One Printer, barcode printers, thermal printers, Multi-Function Printers.And it can be compatible with the old needle printers through USB to parallel port cable or USB to IEEE1284 (D-type 36-pin) adapter. Please see the product description below for incompatible printer models.
- 【For Win and Linux OS】 It supports wired or wireless sharing a printer on Win and Linux systems. It is also needed that your printer is supported on these systems, however.
- 【For Mac OS】 On Mac system, only some printers that support the “H/P jetdirect – socket” print protocol are supported. The printers of other protocols are not supported. Many printers that only support RAW or LPR protocol (TCP / IP port) are not supported to be shared by Mac users by the print server. For some special printers or can’t be shared on Mac, please purchase our MFP series multi-function USB print server to share your printer(s) by sharing USB devices.
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Specification: ATNEDCVH USB 2.0 WiFi Print Server, Wireless LAN Print Share Server for USB Printers,RAW IPP Print Protocol 10/100Mbps USB Network Print Server…
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5 reviews for ATNEDCVH USB 2.0 WiFi Print Server, Wireless LAN Print Share Server for USB Printers,RAW IPP Print Protocol 10/100Mbps USB Network Print Server…
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₹599.00
Catherine –
It’s not hard to set up or figure out, but it sure didn’t work.
Juan Pizarro –
La instalación no es muy facil, debe tener cierto conocimiento de informatica, el idioma de la instalación es en chino, a traves del celular te conectas al dispositivo via WiFi y sigues la guia de instalacion , tambien recomiendo no usen la nube por seguridad y en parametros eliminar los server names.
Thor E Wiegman –
If you are the average Windows computer user, this product is not for you. Not directly. So please ignore this product as it will only frustrate you.
With that said, if you are the kind of person who is comfortable with hardware and know your way around a simple network then you are going to like this little gem. It is a very handy little box that does much more than just adding a printer to your network, if you’re willing to explore that a bit. But I’ll keep the review fair and only talk about adding a printer to the network because that’s what it’s being sold to do.
It will support up to three networks (2 wired, 1 WiFi). Setup of the device is accomplished through a web page served by the device. You know the routine: plug into the LAN port, figure out addresses, go to the page, and configure the device. What I found really cool is that you can do the same thing with WiFi on this device. It will come up like an AP which you connect to then go to the default address for the web page and start the configuration. Despite being connected with it working as an AP they have this clever routine that allows it to scan the local WiFi spectrum and allow you to choose which SSID you want to connect to. Enter the parameters, give it a boot, and….BOOM…it’s on your network. Very nice!
I plugged in my old Canon MP500 printer into the USB and quickly had this little box serving it up as if it were a RAW printer on port 9100 and using IPP on port 631 at the same time. Within 15 minutes of taking this thing out of the box I had produced a test page. Keep in mind that I was using Linux Mint on my laptop for this so I expect Windows users to take longer to get things going as they will need to wrestle with drivers and such.
The included manual is fairly well written. No, it’s not perfect. Given the complexity of maintaining software and documentation in two languages, and the obvious fact that this product is primarily for the Chinese market, I think they did a great job with the manual. It certainly gets the point across and is not at all confusing even if it isn’t perfect. Reading Shakespeare is harder.
The included cables, including the power supply, are good quality. Everything you need to get this going except for the printer and its USB cable are here for you.
I am very pleased with this product.
Arsenio Martins –
I have a black and white laser printer on the first floor. I find that family members now use their phones and tablets more than ever and want to print directly to the printer. My only problem is I don’t have a wifi printer. Also sharing the printer can be problematic if the PC isn’t on. I was hoping this print server would be pretty much plug and play (with a few adjustments) but I was wrong.
Setup can get pretty complicated and this is coming from someone who worked in IT. The workarounds required to get this to work are convoluted. Plus some of the other features like cloud printing route your documents overseas to Chinese servers. No thanks.
Would not recommend.
drose –
Like the title says, just be warned that this is not the easiest thing to configure. Plan on spending some time with it so you don’t get frustrated. Once you get it set up, it works great.
My house has a wired lan and a wireless one. Because one access point wasn’t enough to cover everything, we got a Google WiFi mesh system. It works great and seamlessly everywhere in the house but you cannot set it up as an access point to an existing lan. You either make it the router for the whole house or you have to double NAT it to another router. Which means it is very hard for things on the wired network to see stuff on the wireless one and vice versa. This made printing a pain in the butt. Thankfully, this ATNEDCVH wireless print server can connect to multiple lans at once. I use it to connect to the printer via USB. I use its wifi to connect to the Google mesh network and then use a lan port to connect to the hardwired lan in the house. Now everyone can print without trouble. It’s been headache free since I got it configured and up and running.