Microsoft Vista Home Networking Setup and Options
The most daunting part of upgrading to Windows Vista may be trying to figure out where in the layers of menus the networking and file-sharing options are hidden.
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SMC 7008BR Barricade Broadband Router
Author: Tim Higgins Review Date: 11/11/2000
Model: SMC7008BR
Pros:
- Built-in Windows print server. - Supports dialup WAN connection - Flexible port range mapping with outbound triggers! - Fast!
12/13//00 - Updated review due to firmware improvements.
The Basics
Indicators
Power
"Link/Activity", "100M", "FDX" for each of seven LAN ports
"WAN" Link/Activity for the WAN port
"M1" and "M2" status
"COM" for serial port activity
"COL" for LAN collision detected
"LOOP" for network or bridge loop detection
Connectors
One RJ45 10BaseT for the WAN
Seven switched RJ45 auto sensing 10/100BaseT LAN
Power
Printer (25p female D parallel port)
COM (9p male D serial port)
Comes with
CDRom with PDF copy of User and quick setup guides, and Windows printer sharing software
one page printed Quick Installation Guide
two normal UTP cables
US style power cord.
Other
NO Hardware Reset switch
NO Uplink or Normal / Crossover switch for LAN Ports (see this page if this concerns you!)
Power switch!
Another winner!
The "8 port" Barricade is really a 7 LAN port (c'mon guys, you don't count the WAN port as a port!) version of the popular 4 port Barricade. It has the same feature set as the 4 port model and Asante FriendlyNET twin, so this review will just focus on the differences that the B8 brings to the table. (For the complete poop on the Barricade's feature set, go read the FriendlyNET review.)
What's the diff?
The B8 is a little more professional looking and comes in a more functional package than the B4. All ports and lights are on the front panel (see below), with only the power connector, power switch, Printer, and COM ports on the rear.
Front Panel of the B8
The B8 has a built-in autoranging power supply that can take a 100-240VAC, 50/60Hz input. The power cord connects via a standard IEC appliance type connector, so all you have to do is get a power cord for your country if you can't use the US type 3-prong cord that is supplied. There's also a power switch on the back of the box, so be sure you turn it on!
The B8 manual isn't posted on SMC's support site yet. Drivers and firmware for the Barricade can be found here on the SMC site. SMC doesn't have any other support info posted.
Go a little faster
The motherboard for the B8 is, of course, completely different than the 4 port Barricade. The same processor is used, but the switch chip is a Realtek 8308 instead of the Kendin KS8995, and it seems to have given the B8 a little speed boost as the chart below shows. (The 4 port model clocks in at about 4Mbps.)
(Tests run with 1.86 firmware)
Test Description
Transfer Rate (Mbps)
Qcheck Response Time (msec) [10 iterations 100byte data size]
So the extra ports come with a nice little speed boost!
Summary
The B8 should be another winner for SMC, given the market response to its 4 port model. I'd like to see SMC/Asante/AMIT add the capability to display the DHCP server's lease info and also add traffic logging capability, perhaps with syslog support.
Feedback on the SMC 4 port Barricade has generally been positive, but folks aren't saying much about how well the port mapping features work. If the Barricade does handle mapping chores (and especially gaming and game serving) well, then with its low price, built-in print server, and dialup WAN support, why are folks still buying so many "Linkys"?