Your Ad Here

Qisda-sourced ‘multimedia router’ hits the FCC

Ever wish your wireless router was more than just a router? So have the folks at Qisda, apparently, who have come up with this wild concoction of a device that certainly does many things and may or may not actually do any of them well. Sort of like a less huggable, less rollable mash-up of a Chumby and a Rolly, this touchscreen-equipped, speaker-packing “router” will let you view YouTube vidoes, tune into internet radio stations (or FM radio, for that matter), access media stored on its internal memory (but not your local network, it seems), and even double as a clock radio, to name a few features. Oh, and as a router it’ll do 802.11n, but packs just one spare Ethernet port. Of course, all of this news comes to us courtesy of the FCC, which means there’s no details on things like price or availability, but there are plenty of less than flattering pics, dissection photos, and test reports. Hit up the link below to dive in.

Qisda-sourced ‘multimedia router’ hits the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Dec 2009 03:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFCC  | Email this | Comments

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • DARwIn-OP learns to skate, contemplates NHL career (video)DARwIn-OP learns to skate, contemplates NHL career (video)

    On the list of dangerous humanoid bots DARwIn is well topped by the bow-happy iCub . Still -- we do not trust this thing one iota. While we have not seen it pick up any weaponry just yet, our friends to the north are teaching it certainly one of man's most notoriously violent sports: hockey. Researchers on the University of Manitoba have managed to coach the previous RoboCup … »
  • NASA pulls the plug at the mainframe computer eraNASA pulls the plug at the mainframe computer era

    It is the end of another era at NASA, although this one was perhaps more inevitable than others. Chief Information Officer Linda Cureton announced in a blog post over the weekend that the agency's last mainframe computer was shut down this month, marking an end to decades of room-filling computers. Needless to say, that last mainframe was considerably newer than that pictured above.… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: