After 10 Years on the Net, with more than 2 of those years on a 1.5M/256K DSL connection, recently upgraded to 3.0M/512K, I am finally getting around to setting up a home network. I ordered, but haven't yet received, a Dell Inspiron 1520 Laptop with the T5550 processor and 2GB of DDR2 memory before the deadline passed for getting Windows XP and luckily received a free upgrade to the 128MB NVIDIA GeForce 8400M video card. Sorry, couldn't help bragging a bit! I ordered from Newegg, and have received, a Linksys WRT150N router.
My questions:
Is there anyway that I can set up my HP 5110v all in one, USB interface, as a network printer? I will only have the laptop and my homebuilt desktop on the network.
Secondly, I will likely flash the router with 3rd party firmware. I bought this router because I wanted N wireless capability and caught it on sale for $53 and change. I gather from the Newegg reviews that there are better, though more expensive, routers available. I hope I do not regret my decision to buy this one, even with Newegg's liberal return policy. According to reviews on the Newegg site, the Linksys firmware tends to be a bit on the flaky and unstable side. One of the reviewer recommended firmware flashes is dd wrt, which is open source, Linux based code. Of course flashing with 3rd party firmware voids the warranty if it should be discovered that I did so. I have flashed firmware before, so I am familiar with the process. Even so, what are the potential pitfalls I may not know of? According to reviews, the router will be more stable and have better range, and more settings are tweakable with dd wrt. Do any of you know about
THIS or other alternatives.
Linksys would have you believe that the sky will fall if you don't run their setup CD, which I will NOT do. I will do the manual setup, just as I did when setting up my DSL modem. I will not knowingly install anything on my computer that has Norton in it. After getting ripped off with Norton SystemWorks 2005, and getting fed up with the crashes and instability caused by Norton hogging the system resources, I have been there, done that and ain't gonna make that mistake ever again. All that after having used the 1998 release (version 5?) of SystemWorks for years with good results. Since Linksys is now owned by Cisco and Linksys products have had a good reputation for years, I can only think of that as positives, although they and all other OEM's really need to ditch Norton.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
