Page 76 / 93 Scroll up to view Page 71 - 75
7
6
Networking Basics (continued)
Selecting a Dynamic IP Address with
Macintosh OSX
Go to the
Apple Menu
and select
System Preferences.
Click on
Network.
Select
Built-in Ethernet
in the
Show
pull-down menu.
Select
Using DHCP
in the
Configure
pull-down menu.
Click
Apply Now.
The
IP Address, Subnet
mask
, and the
Router’s IP
Address
will appear in a few
seconds.
±
±
±
±
±
±
Page 77 / 93
7
7
Networking Basics (continued)
Checking the Wireless Connection by
Pinging in W
indows XP/2000
Checking the Wireless Connection by
Pinging in W
indows Me/
98SE
Go to
Start
>
Run
>
type
cmd
.
A window
similar to this one
will appear.
Type
ping
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
,
where
xxx
is the
IP
Address
of the
Wireless Router or
Access Point.
A
good wireless
connection will show
four replies from the
Wireless Router or
Acess Point, as
shown.
Go to
Start
>
Run
> type
command
.
A window similar to
this will appear.
Type
ping
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
where
xxx
is the
IP
Address
of the
Wireless Router or
Access Point.
A
good wireless
connection will
show four replies
from the wireless
router or access
point, as shown.
±
±
Note: The following illustrations are examples only. The IP Address that you are
pinging may be different from those in the following examples.
Page 78 / 93
7
8
Technical Specifications
4 10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet ports
for dual WAN connection, trusted LAN connection
and untrusted LAN connection
Manages up to 250 user accounts
via the internal user account database
ID/Password based authentication and authorization-
Can be combined with MAC
Address locking to provide stricter access control
POP3, RADIUS and LDAP external authentication mechanism support -
Only one
of these can be selected at a time
On-line status monitoring and history traffic data review
SSL protected access
to the administration interface and user authentication inter-
face
Customizable user login, logout web interface
Customizable target URL
for users who successfullly get authorization
Built-in DHCP server
High-speed policy routing engine
Customizable peremptory traffic redirection NTP client
Local network port for connecting a trusted network
Permits access to WAN and LAN from local network without authentication
Permits connection to wired Ethernet while connecting the wireless network
to this Ethernet port
Functions Provided
Page 79 / 93
79
Technical Specifications (continued)
WAN1 port:
10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet
WAN2 port:
10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet
Private LAN port:
10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet connects to workstations & servers
that do not need authentication
Public LAN port:
10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet connects to workstations & devices
that need authentication
Console port:
RS-232 (default set to 115200, n, 8, 1, no flow control)
Power Supply
PC Power Cord
Power Input
110 VAC
Operating T
emperature
0
°
- 50
°
C
S
torage T
emperature
-25
°
- 55
°
C
EMI Certification
FCC Class A
CE Class A
VCCI Class A
C-Tick
Safety
UL
CSA
TUV/GS
T-Mark
Device Port
s
Page 80 / 93
8
0
You can find
software updates and user documentation on the D-Link website.
D-Link provides free technical support for customers within the United States and
within Canada for the duration of the warranty period on this product.
U.S. and Canadian customers can contact D-Link technical support through our
web site, or by phone.
Tech Support for customers within the United States:
D-Link Technical Support over the Telephone:
(877) 453-5465
Twenty four hours a day, seven days a week.
D-Link Technical Support over the Internet:
Tech Support for customers within Canada:
D-Link Technical Support over the Telephone:
(800) 361-5265
Monday through Friday 7:30am to 12:00am EST
D-Link Technical Support over the Internet:
Techni
echni
echni
echni
echnical Support
cal Support
cal Support
cal Support
cal Support

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