NEW USB HUB CUTS A CORD
I maintain that anything helping me to get rid of wires is aces with
me. Basically I can't stand wires. I truly believe that anyone
who has confronted the rat's nest of wires behind their desk must be
in agreement to my cordless mantra of "Wires Are Evil." Over the
years, things have improved within the area of connectivity. Gone
for the most part are parallel cables,
serial cables and those really thick and ugly SCSI cables.
The wires we see on modern
computers are usually USB, Ethernet and a smattering of Firewire
cables. The good news is that wireless technologies such as
Bluetooth and WiFi continue making a large portion of those wired
connections disappear into thin air.
Still, wires continue to plague us and I don't see them completely
disappearing in the near future. For now, power cables seem to be
the final holdout. We really don't have a practical way to send
significant amounts ofpower through the air so for now, it looks
like power cords will remain a necessary evil. Of course clever
engineering can handle excessive cables via cable management systems
and some products that let a single power cord provide electricity
to everything via a system of pass-through connectors.
Most anyone who has ever purchased a cable for their computer
probably knows about Belkin. Based in California, the company is a
market leader in the production of most every kind of computer and
audio/video cable out there.So it's interesting to note that this
leading cable manufacturer continues to come up with wireless
solutions. The company has its CableFree USB Hub, the industry's
first USB Hub that does not require a cable to connect it to the
computer.
The CableFree USB Hub consists of two main parts. The first is the
little transceiver stick that plugs into any USB port on the
computer. The other is the hub itself. The powered four-port hub
sits anywhere in the room and makes its cordless connection to the
computer. You can plug in up to four USB devices and that's pretty
much it. The connection to the computer is handled via a proprietary
wireless connection called Freescale's Ultra-Wideband Technology. At
rates 100 times faster than Bluetooth, the CableFree Hub is capable
of handling high data transfer rates needed for video, audio, and
data streams.
I don't know what took them so long to come out with something like
this but I can tell you that I already have the perfect place where
this will become a necessity. Years ago, I had designed a custom
wall unit to hold two of my printers and two other USB devices
(currently my scanner and label printer). Unfortunately the USB
cable I had wired inside the wall behind the unit to the computer
had become damaged. In addition, it was an older USB 1.1 cable so I
couldn't enjoy the faster speed of my new USB 2.0 peripherals in the
cabinet. Being able to wireless connect all of them via a cordless
connection brings me and the peripherals back up to date. Placing
the CableFree hub in the cabinet lets me connect all of the USB
devices there into the hub. Since the hub communicates to the
computer with out a wire, all of my USB devices in the cabinet will
once again be connected without the ugly wire hanging across the
wall and over the desk to the computer.
The CableFree wireless hub works on any computer with USB ports,
sells for $199.99 and is available directly from the Belkin website.
I realize that the cable-free office is still a ways off but the
CableFree Hub is certainly another milestone toward its realization.
www.belkin.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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