Dell Wireless 1450 USB Adapter

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skumar9988

Forerunner
Feedback: +41 / =0 / -0
Hi,

This is lying in my drawer from last one year or so..Bought it and never found any use of it.-Never Used.

Letting it go for Rs.800 shipped. You will get the adapter with usb cable and thats all..

Download drivers from Dell website. Will provide link if required.

Testing warranty for a week.

Whosoever pays first gets it. No holding nothing.

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PM Me if any info is missing
 
jesal said:
im sorry what does this do exactly ?
The Dell 1450 is a USB adapter that can be positioned anywhere around the PC with the supplied 6-foot USB cable. One end of the cable is your typical USB connection while the other is the mini-USB connection used frequently for digital cameras, and any such cable ought to do the trick. The adapter itself is approximately 2 inches by 3 inches by ¼- ½ inch thick and weighs little to nothing. The bottom plastic plate is black while the top is an opaque cloudy silver color which allows the activity lights to be visible. Across the top is the Dell logo in raised silver letters, making the whole package fairly attractive. The supplied cable is clear plastic wrapping a braided silver wire assembly, again increasing the aesthetics of the unit.

The Dell 1450 is Cisco compliant (mainly due to the fact that it is a Cisco board inside) and therefore should work with most any router out of the box. The unit is WiFi 802.11 a/b/g compliant which will allow you varying degrees of connectivity at either 2.4 or 5.8GHz frequency. The best option is to use the widely available 802.11g network as it allows the highest bandwidth over the furthest distances. At peak theoretical usage you can squeeze 54 mbps out of these connections when relatively close, yet as you get further away the connectivity goes down.

The Dell 1450 has the ability to use many security protocols including WEP, CCX1.0, CCX2.0, and WPA. WPA2 (802.11i) is not available with this adapter, but the literature states that it is upgradeable. I didn't see any need to super-encrypt my co-workers connection so we went with WPA encryption set up with the Netgear router.
 
skumar9988 said:
The Dell 1450 is a USB adapter that can be positioned anywhere around the PC with the supplied 6-foot USB cable. One end of the cable is your typical USB connection while the other is the mini-USB connection used frequently for digital cameras, and any such cable ought to do the trick. The adapter itself is approximately 2 inches by 3 inches by ¼- ½ inch thick and weighs little to nothing. The bottom plastic plate is black while the top is an opaque cloudy silver color which allows the activity lights to be visible. Across the top is the Dell logo in raised silver letters, making the whole package fairly attractive. The supplied cable is clear plastic wrapping a braided silver wire assembly, again increasing the aesthetics of the unit.

The Dell 1450 is Cisco compliant (mainly due to the fact that it is a Cisco board inside) and therefore should work with most any router out of the box. The unit is WiFi 802.11 a/b/g compliant which will allow you varying degrees of connectivity at either 2.4 or 5.8GHz frequency. The best option is to use the widely available 802.11g network as it allows the highest bandwidth over the furthest distances. At peak theoretical usage you can squeeze 54 mbps out of these connections when relatively close, yet as you get further away the connectivity goes down.

The Dell 1450 has the ability to use many security protocols including WEP, CCX1.0, CCX2.0, and WPA. WPA2 (802.11i) is not available with this adapter, but the literature states that it is upgradeable. I didn't see any need to super-encrypt my co-workers connection so we went with WPA encryption set up with the Netgear router.
So to be precise you mean to say that it's a wi-fi connecting device for pc/lappie which is not having inbuilt WI-fi card
 
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