Web Server Packed into RJ45 Connector
VinceTronics writes "Electronic Design magazine has a review (.pdf) of the XPort by Lantronix, a product that packs an entire web server into the volume of an RJ45 connector! This includes an 80186 controller, an OS, the TCP/IP stack, a 10/100 Ethernet transceiver, and the LAN interface magnetics. Downside is that the serial interface to the controller tops out at 300 kbps, but for $33 (in 10K quantities) it's a cool, easy way to net-enable just about anything."
I used to have an ear ring that could run seti@home.
You'll have that sometimes...
It's a good thing that the review wasn't hosted on one of these things! They sound really cool, but there's no way they'd handle a slashdotting! Then again...maybe a Beowulf cluster of them would...
Now my fridge, toaster, washer & dryer can have their own IP addresses & websites.
Bring on IPv6 to deal with it!
...it'd be really small.
Imagine being able to check on the temparature of your fridge over the internet. Even install a web cam inside it. Check what groceries you need from work.
Pow. Cheep, web enabled fridge.
The only problem would be script kiddies. I 0wnzers your cuccumber man
-- Hulver's site
Everyone suggests that these could be used in toasters, fridges, etc. etc... But would you actually run cables to all of these devices?
I can just picture Old Man Stevens handing his wife a juicer for her birthday. Old Lady Stevens lets out a little sigh and grabs a crimper and a spool of Cat5.
FIGHT THE FUTURE!
web cam inside it.> At last! We will finally know if that little light really does turn off when you close the door!
Hell, there'll be so many, it'll simultaneously turn around the tech slump AND drive us all to IPv6.
Until, of course, someone mistakenly installs 10,000 of these babies in the server room. All those geeks...<shudder>
Carousel is a lie!
but dead flies are smaller, cheaper, and in greater abundance :)
Imagine being able to check on the temparature of your fridge over the internet. Even install a web cam inside it.
That would be SO cool! I'd finally be able to get the PROOF of the existance of the little guy who turns on and off the light in my fridge!
Ed Wedig
Graphic design services
docbrown.net
Damn scr1p7 k19913s hacked my toaster - now all it serves up is toast with burn marks that reads "r00ted ya"
A slashdotting - you get the stick first and then the carrot !
It's my Beowulf Cluster. :^)
Add this thing, and suddenly your products are web-enabled.
add another, hack with the tcpip stack, and your fridge is now a router!
We're like rats, in some experiment! -- George Costanza
to me and others in my line of work they're a security nightmare. Due to the small size, it's not hard build a device that could be hidden inside of a building on a network leaving it open to the person who left it there.
Because such a computing device can be misused, we need to write our legislators and get these outlawed.
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.