Thanks, I ordered one. Does it have a reset switch? If not, how do I reset it?
----- Original Message -----
From: Nish Park
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2003 9:13 PM
Subject: RE: [smartBridges] Simplify

This looks like a clean work. I am impressed that you can do it in 30 minutes. I am not trying to throw a book at you. But since you are doing this for commercial reason, you may want to be a little careful. Putting the 120V cord in the box makes it a little tricky. Now you have to worry about UL safety approval etc.  

 

About a year ago we have designed a powerShot-PS2 model. It draws power from PS2 port of the laptop itself. It was developed for this exact requirement. But after it was developed, we changed priorities and never got around marketing it. I just found a reference to it on our web store. It may help with your work and save you some money.  http://www.smartbridges.com/ShopCentral/cat_disp.cgi?CATEGORY_ID=6

 

Nish

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Marcel Muntean - BWN
Sent: Saturday, July 12, 2003 7:39 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: [smartBridges] Simplify

 

   I have just built the attached monster. I have taken the power supply as well as the powershot apart, installed them in the white box and screwed the AirBridge to the box. I have done this to simplify the install in a hotel where people rent an airbridge ocasionally and have to deal with all the wires and powershots...

   This way there is only a 120V cord and one CAT5 that goes into the guest's laptop. It took me 30 minutes to do it, but I rather not. Anybody has doen something like this that looks better, or, SB, interested to put everything in one box?

   Or, am I overreacting?

 

 

THANK YOU!

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