Logitech diNovo Media Desktop Wireless Multimedia Control Panel, Keyboard and Mouse (967562-0102)
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Similar in Keyboards and Mice
- Ergonomic Fit: Right Handed (Mouse) Right and Left Handed (Mouse)
- Input Interface Type: Multimedia Control Panel Keyboard and Mouse
- Motion Device Type: Optical
- Connectivity: Wireless
- Interface: USB (Mouse) USB (keyboard)
- Platform: PC
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Buyer beware
Pros
makes an OK paper weight, or door stop
Cons
Crashes constantly, firmware flaky, very un-reliable
Recommended it?
No
The Bottom Line:
Save your money and buy a different product.
I will start of by saying that I purchased the unit as I had a good experience with my original 802.11b, and thought going to Super G would be just better.
Had I have known what I was getting, i should have stuck with my old unit.
I took it out of the box and hooked it up into by network. I have a Cisco switch that I will say is rock solid. It took around 2-3 hours of pulling my hair out to finally get the unit to talk to my DSL provider. Not that I had anything configured wrong, it just sometimes doesn't like to work. After finally getting a connection long enough to get a newer firmware patch (I ended up doing a direct connect) it finally decided to work.
Then came the mysterious crashes and really slow network performance on all my machines. This was even systems that were not connecting to the Internet at all. Eventually I figured out that if I disconnect the Dlink from the Cisco switch it worked fine. The only solution was to connect every thing to the Dlink to get it to work.
But that didn't stop the problems. It still for some reason would lock up. After countless hours on hold with Dlink I finally spoke to a support rep. His answer was to disable the super-G and turn off all the wep and filters. OK, so I am running a free hotspot for anyone who wants to surf on my DSL, and cannot link my laptop at the higher speeds promised. I might as well stuck with my 802.11b unit.
The kicker is that it still didn't solve the problem. I have yet to get an RMA to return the product. Hang on to your receipt as you can't get it fixed without it. Don't bother trying to register the unit, it doesn't make a bit of difference with warrantee. The unit is fit for the garbage. I use mine to prop open the back door (door stop)
Had I have known what I was getting, i should have stuck with my old unit.
I took it out of the box and hooked it up into by network. I have a Cisco switch that I will say is rock solid. It took around 2-3 hours of pulling my hair out to finally get the unit to talk to my DSL provider. Not that I had anything configured wrong, it just sometimes doesn't like to work. After finally getting a connection long enough to get a newer firmware patch (I ended up doing a direct connect) it finally decided to work.
Then came the mysterious crashes and really slow network performance on all my machines. This was even systems that were not connecting to the Internet at all. Eventually I figured out that if I disconnect the Dlink from the Cisco switch it worked fine. The only solution was to connect every thing to the Dlink to get it to work.
But that didn't stop the problems. It still for some reason would lock up. After countless hours on hold with Dlink I finally spoke to a support rep. His answer was to disable the super-G and turn off all the wep and filters. OK, so I am running a free hotspot for anyone who wants to surf on my DSL, and cannot link my laptop at the higher speeds promised. I might as well stuck with my 802.11b unit.
The kicker is that it still didn't solve the problem. I have yet to get an RMA to return the product. Hang on to your receipt as you can't get it fixed without it. Don't bother trying to register the unit, it doesn't make a bit of difference with warrantee. The unit is fit for the garbage. I use mine to prop open the back door (door stop)