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Home Toys June 2003 Ben Hewitt |
Techno-Home With a little help from smart-home experts Bob Hetherington and Bob Vila, you can install the gadgets and wiring to give your abode -- new or old -- an IQ boost. |
Home Toys June 2003 |
HomeNet Working K.I.T.N is a group of network engineers and I.T specialists dedicated to improving the use of I.T @ Home through the installation of a Standard Home Network Infrastructure (S.H.N.I) during initial house build. |
PC World June 2003 Stephen Manes |
An Unwired Nation? Maybe Next Year Dial-up may be dreary, but you don't need to hunt for a Starbucks to use it. |
Home Toys April 2003 John Drabik |
Creating an Effective VPN Implementation on Embedded Linux This article discusses issues and tradeoffs associated with implementation of IPsec on Virtual Private Network (VPN) gateways. |
Home Toys April 2003 Bob Hetherington |
HomePlug Powerline Networking Devices from Linksys and Siemens HomePlug has hit the streets and I had my first run at it with some products from Linksys and Siemens (SpeedStream). I was pleasantly surprised when I set up my first powerline network, even using products from different manufacturers. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2003 John Teresko |
Extending Ethernet Everywhere Manufacturing's embrace of the compelling advantages of Ethernet is rapidly extending the corporate network solution onto the factory floor. Watch it get better. |
Knowledge@Wharton March 26, 2003 |
Wi-Fi: A Wild Card in Telecom's Restructuring A wild card as the industry restructures is a technology called "wi-fi." Wi-fi is such a hot area -- one of the few pockets of optimism on the tech scene today -- that a recent Wharton conference presented a panel devoted to discussing its potential. |
Macworld April 2003 Mark Anbinder |
NetWare Client Utility Breaks One More Barrier in the Mac-Windows Divide |
PC World April 2003 Becky Waring |
Best Wi-Fi Ever: 802.11g Early products are fast, affordable, and work with popular 802.11b gear. |
T.H.E. Journal March 2003 |
Case Study: Howard University Takes the 'HiPath' to Campus Connectivity Behind a plan to provide all 4,800 students living in residence halls with enhanced telephone services, access to the university's data network and the Internet, 40 channels of commercial TV, and 10 channels of university TV. All these services were provided through a single faceplate. |
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