Tom, We stock and sell most of the Ubiquiti lines and we are hearing 4~6 weeks before this and most of the other new products are physically available. They try to "pre-sell" through their dealer network and then manufacturer to order when they hit a certain volume. Often the first run will be sold out before it arrives and then there is an additional wait for the next run in order to have "open" stock. We have experienced this in the past and are hoping their forecasting and production can be improved. My guess is most of these new products will become available in late December or early January but at this point, there is no way to confirm any hard dates. The good news is that the NS2 and PS2 radios are mostly available and at excellent prices. The cool new radios will start to fill in some holes in their product lines but again, I wouldn't expect to see much if anything before at least December.
Happy Halloween Rick Lindahl "Your Wireless Solution Partner" Invictus Networks, LLC 503-635-2562, f503-635-9207 www.invictusnetworks.com -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom Higgins Sent: Friday, October 31, 2008 11:08 AM To: PTP General list Subject: [ptp-general] The Bullet Has anyone played around with these? On the specs I am intrigued. http://www.ubnt.com/products/bullet.php >From a BBgadget review.. "Unless someone announces a netbook that turns into a spaceship, this is probably the most awesome thing I'll see all day: The Bullet, an 802.11abg gadget that plugs into any antenna. Plug the other into your network and voila: 1000mW of broadcast power that your standard wireless access point does not have. The included AirOS software has all of the features you'd expect from a traditional router-bridge mode, uPnP, NAT, DHCP, port forwarding, web-based configuration, etc.,-but it's open source and comes with an SDK. The unit itself has an Atheros CPU, 16MB of RAM and 4MB of flash, 100 Mbps ethernet, and up to 1000mW of broadcast power, in the forthcoming HD edition. It requires power over ethernet. A lesson I learned from my adventures with Pringles Cans is that it's easy to forget about the uplink: point-to-point WiFi hookups work much better with the signal boosted at both ends. But as this thing is just $40, that's not an expensive problem." --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ The Personal Telco Project - http://www.personaltelco.net/ Donate to PTP: http://www.personaltelco.net/donate Archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.wireless.portland.general/ Etiquette: http://www.personaltelco.net/index.cgi/MailingListEtiquette List information: http://lists.personaltelco.net To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
