



( 19 reviews )
-




Posted: May 5 2009
Cisco is putting their name on these devices, but they're a far cry from real Cisco gear. I've been a networking professional for almost 20 years. Cisco beats Netgear, HP, D-Link, and the rest, hands down when it comes to enterprise level networking equipment. Linksys was bought by Cisco, but so far I haven't seen any indication that Cisco's quality is seeping into the Linksys product line. I'm trying to rid my network, and my users' homes, of these small Linksys switches. In my experience, they are a constant source of problems.
-




Posted: Feb 24 2009
I needed to add a few more ports to my home network. This switch rocks. As always, linksys comes thru with quality hardware. I installed it and turned everything on and wham ....auto-sensing/switching my laptop and desktop were on the web simutaneously. Great product and would recommend to others without any doubt !!! :) Amazon came thru, as always .... L
-




Posted: Jan 29 2009
This switch can go on any router to add more ports to it. My venerable Cisco 678 has served me for 7 years of heavy use on one computer without so much as a hiccup. It is a "one-port router modem." I know that sounds like an oxymoron to most people but technically, having-more-than-one-service-port is not what defines a router. That's what defines a switch. A Router is a device with the electronic ability to "direct the flow of traffic" of data among many computers or devices. All "routers" (or "modem routers") on the market in recent memory have combined a switch and router in the same unit, or a switch, router, and modem in the same unit. But the classic Cisco 678 was a modem router with no switch, a one-computer device with the ability to expand to more computers by adding a switches. IMO, it'sone of the best modem-routers ever made. As switches are very simple devices, a good switch with this router will be a trouble free device. That's what I have now. The Cisco 678 originally retailed for a several hundred dollars, but you can still pick them up new or used for a song. The latest Cisco modem routers sold today have done nothing more than added a switch, along with more bells, whistles and complications. If you buy a Cisco 678, just make sure you have an original disk or copy of the "Commander for 67X Products" CD to set it up, and a management cable to configure it to your provider address/password. Management cables can even be made using a short piece of network cable, an old female 9-pin serial plug on a serial cable. A continuity tester would be helpful. Pinout Diagrams are somewhere on google and/or Cisco, and download a free copy of Zonealarm or other free firewall for each computer. The 678 user guide can be downloaded. The 678 goes up to 7 Mbs downlink. If that's fast enough, and you are willing to take the time and patience to set it up you'll never regret it. Forgot to mention. If you use the cisco 678 directly - without a switch - to only one computer, it requires a crossover ethernet cable, rather than a straight through cable, which is what most cables are. Of course, with the SD205, you have auto-sensing in the connections so you can use either kind of cable on any part of the system. You can run either a crossover or a straight-thru cable from the Cisco 678 to the SD205. And by the way, you'll never regret buying this SD205 switch.















