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« All About the Backhaul | Main | Two Chicago McDonald's Bridge Digital Divide, Offer Free Wi-Fi »
Kensington intros WiFi Finder: Small, lightweight, and useful? I don’t know the price, I don’t know when it ships, but it’ll tell you when you’re within sensing range of a Wi-Fi network (802.11b or g) using three lights to indicate signal strength. [via Cord Campbell]
Posted by Glennf at July 9, 2003 1:33 PM
Categories: Unique
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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Geiger Counter for Wi-Fi?:
» Wi-Fi Detector from Kensington from Lockergnome's Bits and Bytes
"Your life on the road just got a lot easier. With the first and only WiFi detector on the market today, you no longer need to cross your fingers as you wait for your notebook to boot up. Just press a button and the Kensington WiFi Finder lets you know... [Read More]
Tracked on July 11, 2003 11:20 AM
large? it's two inches by three!
Posted by: wingphil at July 14, 2003 1:15 AM
Well it is only a reciever so it is not capable of relating whether or not the network is open or closed, I bet it is not completely immune to interference, and three LED's for signal strength is kind of shabby.
Posted by: AxonTen at July 13, 2003 2:38 PM
The design may suck and the size might be large but does it work?
Are there any alternatives?
Posted by: John Rozier at July 13, 2003 1:05 AM
Pretty cool device but the design sucks and its fairly large.
Posted by: jblib at July 12, 2003 3:06 PM