Binding: Electronics Brand: TRENDnet EAN: 0710931502510 Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Height: 520 hundredths-inches Length: 85 hundredths-inches Weight: 200 hundredths-pounds Width: 480 hundredths-inches Label: TRENDnet Manufacturer: TRENDnet Model: TEW423PI Network Interface Description: PCI Packaged Height: 130 hundredths-inches Packaged Length: 740 hundredths-inches Packaged Weight: 35 hundredths-pounds Packaged Width: 540 hundredths-inches Publisher: TRENDnet Special Features: nv:Device Type^Wireless Adapter|Interface^PCI|Wireless Network Standards^IEEE 802.11g|Wireless Network Standards^IEEE 802.11b|Wireless Data Transfer Rates^54 Mbps|Wireless Network Configuration^Ad-Hoc (Peer-to-Peer)|Wireless Network Configuration^Infrastructure|Wireless Frequency Range^2.4 - 2.4835 GHz|Security Protocols^128-bit WEP|Security Protocols^64-bit WEP|Modulation Technology^DBPSK|Modulation Technology^DQPSK|Modulation Technology^CCK|Modulation Technology^OFDM Studio: TRENDnet Warranty: 3 years warranty
Feature:
- Wi-Fi Compliant with IEEE 802.11g and IEEE 802.11b Standards
- Uses 2.4 GHz Frequency Band, which Complies with Worldwide Requirements
- Supports Ad-Hoc (Peer-to-Peer) Mode or Infrastructure (AP-Client) Mode
- Dynamic Data Rate Scaling at 54, 48, 36, 24, 18, 12, 9 and 6Mbps for 802.11g.
- Compatible with Windows 98(SE)/ME/2000/XP
Product Description:
TRENDnet's TEW-423PI 54Mbps Wireless PCI Card cuts the wires to your desktop and provides 54Mbps speed to handle bandwidth-intensive applications. It complies with the IEEE 802.11g standard, making it backward compatible with 802.11b networks for assured compatibility. Advanced Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) and up to 256-bit WEP encryption are supported to provide secure access for your data. Cut the wires and move your desktop where you need it with TRENDnet's 802.11g wireless PCI Card.
Customer Reviews:
Absolute zero!!! This company should go out of business, 2008-07-15 This card is garbage. It works when it wants to. Sometimes it connects, other times it either won't connect under any circumstances short of pulling out the power of the router...then waiting until it is reinitialized. When that happens it connects at random speeds and continues to fall under total failure occurs. Not ever have I had such an annoying problem with a wireless card. I even went out of my way to spend a lil bit more for what I thought was a better quality card. I am extremely disappointed, really! I now have the cheapest wireless g-pci card I could find, and that one works flawlessly. Shame on TRENDnet for selling this rubbish!
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