D Link PR1040A1 1USB2.0 port MFP Print Server User Manual 2 of 2

D Link Corporation 1USB2.0 port MFP Print Server 2 of 2

Contents

User manual 2 of 2

93
94 Highlight the printer, as shown. If the desired printer is not on the list, click Have Disk and insert the printer driver disk that came with your printer to install the printer drivers. Click Next
95 Click Next to start installing the printer.
96 After clicked Print a test page, a small dialogue box will show up as below. Click Close.
97 Click Finish.
98 The printer is now ready for printing with Windows Vista on your network.
99 TCP/IP Printing for Windows XP Go to Start => Printers and Faxes => Add a Printer.  When the following screen shows up, click Next.
100 Select the first option, Local printer attached to this computer, and click Next.
101 Select the second option, Create a new port, and highlight Standard TCP/IP Port from the pull-down menu. Click Next.
102 Click Next.
103 Type the IP address of the MFP server (e.g. 10.62.31.15 used in this manual), which can be referred from the PRINTER SERVER STATUS of the MFP server’s Web configuration, and then the Port Name will automatically be filled in. Click Next
104 Select Custom and click Settings.
105 Then the follow screen will shows up, select LPR from the Protocol field. Then enter the Queue Name, which can be referred from PRINTER STATUS of the MFP server’s Web configuration, in the LPR Settings field. Click OK.
106
107 Click Next.
108 Click Finish.
109 Highlight the printer, as shown. If the desired printer is not on the list, click Have Disk and insert the printer driver disk that came with your printer to install the printer drivers. Click Next
110 At this screen, you can input a name for the printer, and then click Next
111 Select Yes to print a test page, click Next.  Click Finish. The printer is now ready for printing with Windows XP on your network.
112
113 TCP/IP Printing for Windows 2000 Go to Start => Settings => Printers and Faxes => Add a Printer.  When the following screen shows up, click Next.
114 Select the first option, Local printer attached to this computer, and click Next.
115 Click Next if New Printer Detection page pops up. Select the second option, Create a new port, and highlight Standard TCP/IP Port from the pull-down menu. Click Next.
116 Click Next.
117 Type the IP address of the MFP server (e.g. 10.62.31.15 used in this manual), which can be checked from the PRINTER SERVER STATUS of the MFP server’s Web configuration, and then the Port Name will automatically be filled in. Click Next
118 Select Custom and click Settings.
119 Then the follow screen will shows up, select LPR from the Protocol field. Then enter the Queue Name, which can be referred from PRINTER STATUS of the MFP server’s Web configuration, in the LPR Settings field. Click OK.
120
121 Click Next.
122 Click Finish.
123 Highlight the printer, as shown. If the desired printer is not on the list, click Have Disk and insert the printer driver disk that came with your printer to install the printer drivers. Click Next.
124 At this screen, you can input a name for the printer, and then click Next
125 Select the first option, Do not share this printer, and click Next.
126 Select Yes to print a test page, click Next.
127 Click Finish. The printer is now ready for printing with Windows 2000 on your network.
128 TCP/IP Printingfor Windows 98SE/ME Go to Start => Settings => Control Panel. Double click on Network, and then click Add.
129 Highlight Client and click Add.            At this window, click Have Disk.
130 1. Insert the DPP-1061 CD-ROM into your CD-ROM drive. Select the letter representing the CD-ROM drive on your computer from the pull-down menu. 2. Double-click on the folder lpr. 3. Highlight lpr.inf 4. Click OK.  Click OK to accept the location of the file.
131 You should now be back to the Network Properties Page. Highlight LPR for TCP/IP Printing and click Properties.
132 Click Add Port.
133 Type in the IP address and Port Name of the MFP server, which can be referred from the PRINTER SERVER STATUS and PRINTER STATUS of the MFP server’s Web configuration, in the corresponding field, and then click OK. (The IP Address and Port Name here are just for example only.)
134
135 The IP Address and Port Name will be displayed in the following screen. (The IP Address and Port Name here are just for example only.) Click OK.
136 Click OK.
137 Windows will ask for a restart. Click Yes.   Once your computer has rebooted, click on Start => Settings => Printers => Add Printer. When the Add Printer Wizard screen appears, click Next.
138 Select Network Printer and click Next.  Type in the path if you know it; otherwise, click Browse.
139 At the following screen, browse for the printer port and highlight the port (e.g. dlink-1D6FA3 in this manual). Click OK.
140 If the network path is not specified, type in the IP Address and Port Name of the MFP server. Select Yes or No to enable or disable printing from MS-DOS based programs. Click Next.
141 Highlight the printer, as shown. If the desired printer is not on the list, click Have Disk and insert the printer driver disk that came with your printer to install the printer drivers. Click Next.
142 Click Next.  Select Yes to print a test page. Click Finish.
143 To check whether the printer is installed, go to Start => Settings => Printers.
144 Unix/Linux Printing Printing Text Files form Unix Text files on Unix systems contain lines that end with “newline” characters, as opposed to MS-DOS and Windows-related operating systems that end with a carriage return followed by a linefeed. Most printers require a carriage return/linefeed pair at the end of each line, making it necessary for some translation to be done before Unix text files can be printed on most printers.  For this purpose, you can define two “printers” for the same printer port, one that prints to the port itself, and one that prints to the port name with _TEXT added to the name. Files printed to the second port will be translated so that the printer has the carriage return/linefeed pairs that it needs.  For example, you could define a printer hp5l that prints to port PS-142634-P1, and a printer hp5lt that prints to port PS-142634-P1_TEXT Your graphics files could then be printed to the hp5l printer, and “raw” text files could be printed to the hp5lt printer.
145 Printing form BSD Unix Versions For “flavors” of the Unix operating system derived from or related to the BSD releases, such as SunOS 4.x, Linux, BSD/OS, FreeBSD, or NetBSD, you can use the following procedure to enable users to print to a printer connected to your D-LINK network print server:  1. Log in as the superuser (root). 2. Add an entry for the print server in the host’s /etc/hosts file, giving a hostname for the print server’s IP address. A line in /etc/hosts contains an IP address and one or more aliases for the host . For example: 202. 39. 74. 40 ps-142634 ps-142634.dlink.com.tw  If you use DNS (the Domain Naming Services protocol), you can add an address record entry to your DNS database for the print server.  3. Create a spool directory for the printer: On SunOS systems, create the directory as a subdirectory of /var/spool, with the same name as the printer (e.g., /var/spool/hp5l ). On Linux systems, create the directory as a subdirectory of /user/spool /lp. On BSD/OS, FreeBSD, or NetBSD systems, create the directory as subdirectory of /var/spool.  4. Change the owner and permissions of the directory so that it is owned and writable by group  , using the following commands:
146 chown bin.daemon /var/spool/hp5l chmod 775 /var/spool/hp5l  5. Add an entry for the printer to /etc/printcap, similar to the following: hp5l:\ :lp=:sd=/var/spool/hp5l :mx#0:\ :rm=ps-142634:rp=ps-142634-p1: The meaning of each of the entries is described below. The directory path in the spool directory entry should match the directory name you created above. If your entry requires more than one line you can escape the newline with a backslash.  6. Issue the command lpc start hp5l to start a spool daemon for the printer. The printer will now be available for use.  7. Optionally, add another printcap entry (and issue another lpc start command) for a second printer, using the port_TEXT port. This second printer name can be used for printing text files. Entries in /ect/printcap begin with a name for the printer or a list of name, separated by | (a vertical bar). The entries used above are:  lp= The lp entry is used to specify a local printer device. Since the printer is a remote printer, this entry should be blank. 145 sd=dir The location of the printer’s local spool directory. mx#blocks The limit for print job files in the local spool directory;
147 0 means no limit. rm=address The host where the remote printer is located, in this case the D-Link print server. rp=printer The name of the printer on the remote host. For the D-Link print server, the port name should be used. Note: this entry is case-sensitive.
148 Printing from SCO Unix System V/386 To allow printing to a printer attached to your D-LINK network print server from a SCO Unix System V/386 host.  1. Login as the superuser (root). 2. Add an entry for the print server in the host’s /etc/hosts file, giving a hostname for the print server’s IP address. A line in /etc/hosts contains an IP address and one or more aliases for the host. For example: 202.39.74.40 ps-142634 ps-142634.dlink.com.tw If you use DNS (the Domain Naming Services protocol), you can add an address record entry to your DNS database for the print server.  3. Change to the /dev directory, and issue the command mkdev rlp  4. The script will ask: Do you want to install or delet remote printing (i/d/q)? Answer i and press Enter to continue.  5. The script will ask: Do you want to change the remote printer description file /etc/printcap (y/n)? Answer y and press Enter to continue.  6. The script will ask: Please enter the printer name (q to quit):
149 Enter an alias for the printer on the local machine and press Enter. This name should be the same as the destination port name.  7. Answer r (remote printer) to the question Is printer a remote printer or a local printer (r/l)?  8. When prompted with the question: Please enter the name of the remote host that printer is attached to: then enter the address of the D-Link print server. You can use the name you added to /etc/host in the step above.  9. Confirm that your entries are correct. Is this correct? (y/n)  10. Answer the question: Would you like this to be the system default printer? (y/n)  11. When you are done adding remote printers, enter q for the printer name.  12. Answer y to the question Do you want to start remote daemon now (y/n)? Once remote printing is set up, you can use the lp command to print jobs to the new printer. For more information, consult your SCO Unix documentation.
150 Printing from Solaris To allow printing from a Sun Solaris workstation, 1. Log in as the superuser (root). 2. Add an entry for the print server in the host’s /etc/hosts file, giving a hostname for the print server’s IP address. A line in /etc/hosts contains an IP address and one or more aliases for the host . For example: 202.39.74.40 ps-142634 ps-142634.dlink.com.tw If you use DNS (the Domain Naming Services protocol), you can add an address record entry to your DNS database for the print server. 3. In OpenWindows, start the admintool program. 4. Click on the Printer Manger icon. 5. From the Edit menu, select Add Print, then Add Access to Remote Printer… 6. Enter values for the fields as follow: Printer Name This field should contain the name of the printer port you wish to use. The field is case-sensitive. Printer Server This field should contain the IP address of the print server, or the alias name you added in step 2. Printer Server OS This field should be set to BSD. 7. Confirm the addition. 8. Optionally repeat the addition to add another printer for printing text files, with_TEXT appended to the port name. Once you have added the new printer, you can use the lp command to print files to the printer. Consult your Solaris documentation for details.
151 Printing from Red Hat Linux Adding a Printer 1. Click the printer icon    at the bottom of the desktop.  2. Since no printer is set up so far, a prompt appears asking to run the printer configuration tool.
152 3. Click the OK button in the pop-up dialogue box to open the man Printer configuration tool menu. Note that to use the Printer configuration tool you must have root privileges, and to start the application you may also type the command: “redhat-config-printer”. 4. Click the New button    in the Printer configuration tool menu.
153 Printer Configuration Tool menu 5. The Add a new print queue menu appears, click Forward to continue.
154 6. Enter a unique name for the printer in the Name text field. The printer name cannot contain spaces and must begin with a letter. The printer name may contain letters, numbers, dashes (-), and underscores (_). Optionally, enter a short description for the printer, which can contain spaces. Then click Forward to enter Queue type window.   7. Select Networked UNIX (LPD) in the Select a queue type pull down menu, enter the IP address of the print server to which the printer is attached in Server field, and type the port name in queue field. Click Forward to select the type of printer.
155  8. Select the printer model.
156 If a printer has not been detected automatically, select the model from the list. You can manually select the name of the printer manufacturer from the Generic (click to select manufacturer) pull-down menu, and the printer model from the sub-list. Click Forward to continue.  9. The last step is to confirm your printer configuration. Click Apply button to confirm or Back button to modify the configuration.
157 10. Print a test page to make sure the printer is functioning properly. To print a test page, select the printer from the printer list, then select the appropriate test page from the Test drop-down menu.
158 Setting up Printing in Mac OS X Tiger(10.4.9) NOTE: Mac OS printing is supported by Postscript printers only! With Mac OS X Tiger (10.4), you can use Apple Talk, Bonjour, Internet Printing Protocol (IPP), Line Printer Daemon (LPD), and HP Jet Direct-Socket printing through Print Server. Click on this icon    in your Dock to open your System Preferences window as below.  Click on the Network icon in System Preferences menu to view the menu below.
159 Select the Apple Talk tab in the Network menu. Check to select the Make Apple Talk Active option. Click on the Apply Now button and close the menu. Apple Talk is now active on the system. Now a printer can be added.  Adding a Printer Use the Go menu at the top tool bar and select Applications option and find the Utilities folder or open the Utilities folder directly in Go menu.
160                         In the Utilities folder, find and select    to see the Printer List dialog window.
161 Click Add button to open Printer Browser window.        Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) supports five printing protocols: 1. AppleTalk 2. Bonjour 3. Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) 4. Line Printer Daemon (LPD) 5. HP Jet Direct – Socket To add an Internet Printing Protocol enabled, Line Printer Daemon enabled or HP Jet Direct – Socket enabled printer, click on the    button and follow the instructions to add an IP Printer beginning on “Adding an IP printer” session.
162 AppleTalk-enabled or Bonjour-enabled Printers To add an AppleTalk-enabled or Bonjour-enabled printer, click the   button in the Printer Browser menu.            Select the printer model from Printer Name list and Connection type in the Printer Browser menu. The printer name selected should be the same as that appearing listed in the Printer Server’s web manager. In the example here, the printer name is
163 dlk-C352AB-U1. By default the Printer Browser will use the Auto Select for Print Using: to determine what printer configuration to use. This may also be manually selected in the Print Using drop-down menu by brand and model. Click the Add button to exit the Printer Browser window and implement the new setting.
164 The printer that has just been added will show up in the Printer List menu, it might take a few seconds depending on network conditions. When the printer appears listed it is ready for use. Quit the Printer Setup Utility and start printing.
165 Adding an IP Printer To add an Internet Printing Protocol enabled, Line Printer Daemon enabled or HP Jet Direct – Socket enabled printer, click the    button in the Printer Browser window. Select a desired printing protocol from the Protocol drop-down menu.
166 Type the IP Address of the printer. The name will appear in the Name field when the printer is found. The Printer Browser will indicate that it is verifying the address. If the printer is found, the Printer Browser will state “Valid and complete address” in the Address field.  The printer utility is able to detect the printer and may automatically select the correct printer driver in the Print Using field. Or manually select the printer-maker from the Print Using drop-down menu, and then select the printer model from the scroll-down list, or select Generic PostScrip Printer option from the Print Using drop-down menu if the model is not listed. To implement the setting, click Add button. The setup procedures for these three printing protocols (Internet Printing Protocol (IPP), Line Printer Daemon (LPD), and HP Jet Direct – Socket) are basically the same. Illustrated examples are include below for the sake of reference.
167 For set up LPD Printing: 1. Enter the IP address of the print server to which the printer is attached in Address field. 2. Type the port name in the Queue field.        Click Add button after done the section of printer model in the Print Using drop-down menu.  For set up IPP Printing: 1. Enter the IP address of the print server to which the printer is attached in
168 Address field. After that, type “: 80” or “: second port” if print server’s second port is enabled. 2. Type the port name in the Queue field.  Click Add button after done the section of printer model in the Print Using drop-down menu.  For set up Socket Printing: 1. Enter the IP address of the print server to which the printer is attached in Address field. After that, type “: 9100” for port 1, “: 9101” for port 2 or “: 9102”
169 for port 3. 2. Keep the blank in Queue field.       Click Add button after done the section of printer model in the Print Using drop-down menu.
170 When the Installable Options pop-up window shows up as below, click Continue button.            The printer that has just been added will show up in the Printer List menu, it might take a few seconds depending on network conditions. When the printer appears listed it is ready for use. Quite the Printer Setup Utility and start printing.
171
172 Setting up AppleTalk Printing in Mac OS 9 : Mac OS printing is supported by Postscript printers only! The AppleTalk network protocol is used with computers using the MacOS operating system. It can be used for network communications over standard Ethernet or Fast Ethernet using the EtherTalk transport, or over a proprietary low-speed LocalTalk transport. MFP server can be used for network printing to PostScript printers. You can print from any MacOS computer connected to your Ethernet network, either directly using an EtherTalk connection, or indirectly through a LocalTalk-to-EtherTalk router.  : The Chooser name of a printer connected to one of the Print Server‘s ports is the same as its Port Name. If you are using AppleTalk printing, you will need to make sure that every Port Name is unique among all of the network printers in your AppleTalk zone. The Port Names shown in this manual are examples only. To set up MFP server so that it can be used for AppleTalk printing:  Make sure the AppleTalk protocol is enabled in your Macintosh.  Make sure the PC’s IP Address must correspond with the Print Server’s IP Address in the same segment for the two devices to communicate.  Launch the browser and enter print server web interface, select the ADVANCED tab, click Advanced LAN button and then scroll to the bottom to the AppleTalk protocol section  If your AppleTalk network is divided into AppleTalk zones, you will have to specify which zone the Print Server should be in. You should locate the Print Server in the same zone as most of the users who will be using it. If your network is not divided into zones, the AppleTalk Zone field should contain a single asterisk (*).
173 For each Printer Port that will be used for AppleTalk printing, you may need to change the AppleTalk Port Settings in the Advanced LAN screen, shown as below.  AppleTalk Enter the AppleTalk Zone name in the box. In the following options, enter the related configuration, such as the printer type. Chooser Name: Display the print server's port name. Printer Type: Enter the printer's type in this box. PostScript Level: Select from the pull-down menu (Level 1 or Level 2).
174 Font Group: Select from the pull-down menu.  The exact procedure for selecting a PostScript printer connected to MFP server may vary slightly, depending on what printer driver version you are using. The procedure described below assumes you are using the LaserWriter 8. To choose a printer connected to MFP server as your MacOS workstation‘s default printer, open the Chooser by selecting Chooser from the Apple menu. Select the LaserWriter 8 icon on the left. Make sure that AppleTalk is set to Active. A list of all networked PostScript printers will be displayed as follow. Double-click the name of the Printer Port you wish to use. The Printer Ports shown are examples only.            If you have not previously set this printer as the default, your computer will prompt you for a PostScript Printer Description file. Choose Select PPD.
175  Select the appropriate printer description file for your printer. Click Open. (If your printer is not listed, click Generic to use a generic printer description.) If you wish to access this setting in the future, you can use the Setup button in the Chooser window. The selected printer will become your computer‘s default printer. You may need to choose Page Setup in any applications you have open.
176 Technical Specifications Printer Connection Printer Port: USB 2.0 Bi-directional Communication: Hewlett-Packard PJL (Printer Job Language) standard for bi-directional communication. Network Connection Network Standards: 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet Network Data Transfer Rate: 10/100 Mbps (megabits per second) Network Connector: RJ-45 Network Protocols Ethernet Frame Types: 802.2, 802.3, Ethernet II, SNAP (auto-switching) Transport Protocols: TCP/IP, NetBEUI, AppleTalk/EtherTalk, LPR,SMB TCP/IP Protocols Supported: BOOTP, SNMP, FTP, LPD, RARP, DHCP, IPP Management and Diagnostics Standard: SNMP MIBs: MIB-II (RFC 1213) Diagnostic LED Indicators: Power, Link/Act, USB Environmental and Physical Power Supply: External power supply providing 5V, 2.5A DC Dimensions: 58.1(W) x 26.5(H) x 90(D)mm Weight: approx. 10.3 oz. (292g) Operating Temperature: 32 to122°F (0 to 50°C) Storage Temperature: -13 to 131°F (-25 to 55°C) Humidity: 5% to 95% non-condensing Emissions: FCC Class B, CE Class B, VCCI Class B 180
177 Contacting Technical Support 181 Warranty and Registration Subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein, D-Link Systems, Inc. (—D-Link“) provides this Limited warranty for its product only to the person or entity that originally purchased the product from:  D-Link or its authorized reseller or distributor and  Products purchased and delivered within the fifty states of the United States, the District of  Columbia, U.S. Possessions or Protectorates, U.S. Military Installations, addresses with an APO or FPO. Limited Warranty: D-Link warrants that the hardware portion of the D-Link products described below will be free from material defects in workmanship and materials from the date of original retail purchase of the product, for the period set forth below applicable to the product type (—Warranty Period“), except as otherwise stated herein. 1-Year Limited Warranty for the Product(s) is defined as follows:  Hardware (excluding power supplies and fans) One (1) Year  Power Supplies and Fans One (1) Year  Spare parts and spare kits ninety (90) days. D-Link‘s sole obligation shall be to repair or replace the defective Hardware during the Warranty Period at no charge to the original owner or to refund at D-Link‘s sole discretion. Such repair or replacement will be rendered by D-Link at an Authorized D-Link Service Office. The replacement Hardware need not be new or have an identical make, model or part. D-Link may in its sole discretion replace the defective Hardware (or any part thereof) with any reconditioned product that D-Link reasonably determines is substantially equivalent (or superior) in all material respects to the defective Hardware. Repaired or replacement Hardware will be warranted for the remainder of the original Warranty Period from the date of original retail purchase. If a material defect is incapable of correction, or if D-Link determines in its sole discretion that it is not practical to repair or replace the defective Hardware, the price paid by the original purchaser
178 for the defective Hardware will be refunded by D-Link upon return to D-Link of the defective Hardware. All Hardware (or part thereof) that is replaced by D-Link, or for which the purchase price is refunded, shall become the property of D-Link upon replacement or refund. Limited Software Warranty: D-Link warrants that the software portion of the product (—Software“) will substantially conform to D-Link‘s then current functional specifications for the Software, as set forth in the applicable documentation, from the date of original retail purchase of the Software for a period of ninety (90)days (—Warranty Period“), provided that the Software is properly installed on approved hardware and operated as contemplated in its documentation. D-Link further warrants that, during the Warranty Period, the magnetic media on which D-Link delivers the Software will be free of physical defects. D-Link‘s sole obligation shall be to replace the non-conforming Software (or defective media) with software that substantially conforms to D-Link‘s functional specifications for the Software or to refund at D-Link‘s sole discretion. Except as otherwise agreed by D-Link in writing, the replacement Software is provided only to the original licensee, and is subject to the terms and conditions of the license granted by D-Link for the Software. Software will be warranted for the remainder of the original Warranty Period from the date or original retail purchase. If a material non-conformance is incapable of correction, or if D-Link determines in its sole discretion that it is not practical to replace the non-conforming Software, the price paid by the original licensee for the non-conforming Software will be refunded by D-Link; provided that the non-conforming Software (and all copies thereof) is first returned to D-Link. The license granted respecting any Software for which a refund is given automatically terminates. Non-Applicability of Warranty: The Limited Warranty provided hereunder for hardware and software of D-Link‘s products will not be applied to and does not cover any refurbished product and any product 182 purchased through the inventory clearance or liquidation sale or other sales in which D-Link, the sellers, or the liquidators expressly disclaim their warranty obligation pertaining to the product and in that case, the product is being sold —As-Is“ without any warranty whatsoever including, without limitation, the Limited Warranty as described herein, notwithstanding anything stated herein to the contrary. Submitting A Claim: The customer shall return the product to the original purchase point based on its return policy. In case the return policy period has expired and the product is within warranty, the
179 customer shall submit a claim to D-Link as outlined below:  The customer must submit with the product as part of the claim a written description of the Hardware defect or Software nonconformance in sufficient detail to allow D-Link to confirm the same. The original product owner must obtain a Return Material Authorization (—RMA“) number from the Authorized D-Link Service Office and, if requested, provide written proof of purchase of the product (such as a copy of the dated purchase invoice for the product) before the warranty service is provided.  After an RMA number is issued, the defective product must be packaged securely in the original or other suitable shipping package to ensure that it will not be damaged in transit, and the RMA number must be prominently marked on the outside of the package. Do not include any manuals or accessories in the shipping package. D-Link will only replace the defective portion of the Product and will not ship back any accessories.  The customer is responsible for all in-bound shipping charges to D-Link. No Cash on Delivery (—COD“) is allowed. Products sent COD will either be rejected by D-Link or become the property of D-Link. Products shall be fully insured by the customer and shipped to D-Link Systems, Inc., 53 Discovery Drive, Irvine, CA 92618. D-Link will not be held responsible for any packages that are lost in transit to D-Link. The repaired or replaced packages will be shipped to the customer via UPS Ground or any common carrier selected by D-Link, with shipping charges prepaid. Expedited shipping is available if shipping charges are prepaid by the customer and upon request. D-Link may reject or return any product that is not packaged and shipped in strict compliance with the foregoing requirements, or for which an RMA number is not visible from the outside of the package. The product owner agrees to pay D-Link‘s reasonable handling and return shipping charges for any product that is not packaged and shipped in accordance with the foregoing requirements, or that is determined by D-Link not to be defective or non-conforming. What Is Not Covered: This limited warranty provided by D-Link does not cover: Products, if in D-Link‘s judgment, have been subjected to abuse, accident, alteration, modification, tampering, negligence,
180 misuse, faulty installation, lack of reasonable care, repair or service in any way that is not contemplated in the documentation for the product, or if the model or serial number has been altered, tampered with, defaced or removed; Initial installation, installation and removal of the product for repair, and shipping costs; Operational adjustments covered in the operating manual for the product, and normal maintenance; Damage that occurs in shipment, due to act of God, failures due to power surge, and cosmetic damage; Any hardware, software, firmware or other products or services provided by anyone other than D-Link; Products that have been purchased from inventory clearance or liquidation sales or other sales in which D-Link, the sellers, or the liquidators expressly disclaim their warranty obligation pertaining to the product. Repair by anyone other than D-Link or an Authorized D-Link Service Office will void this Warranty. Disclaimer of Other Warranties: EXCEPT FOR THE LIMITED WARRANTY SPECIFIED HEREIN, THEPRODUCT IS PROVIDED —AS-IS“ WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSEAND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IF ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY CANNOT BE DISCLAIMED IN ANYTERRITORY WHERE A PRODUCT IS SOLD, THE DURATION OF SUCH IMPLIED WARRANTY SHALL BE LIMITED TO NINETY (90) DAYS. EXCEPTAS EXPRESSLY 183 COVERED UNDER THE LIMITED WARRANTY PROVIDED HEREIN, THE ENTIRERISK AS TOTHE QUALITY, SELECTION AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT IS WITH THE PURCHASER OFTHE PRODUCT. Limitation of Liability: TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, D-LINK IS NOT LIABLE UNDERANY CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY OR OTHER LEGAL OR EQUITABLE THEORY FOR ANYLOSS OF USE OF THE PRODUCT, INCONVENIENCE OR DAMAGES OF ANY CHARACTER, WHETHER DIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OFGOODWILL, LOSS OF REVENUE OR PROFIT, WORK STOPPAGE, COMPUTER FAILURE OR MALFUNCTION, FAILURE OF OTHER EQUIPMENT OR COMPUTER PROGRAMS TO WHICH D-LINK‘S PRODUCT IS CONNECTEDWITH, LOSS OF INFORMATION OR DATA CONTAINED IN, STORED ON, OR INTEGRATED WITH ANY
181 PRODUCTRETURNED TO D-LINK FOR WARRANTY SERVICE) RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THE PRODUCT, RELATINGTO WARRANTYSERVICE, OR ARISING OUT OFANY BREACH OF THIS LIMITED WARRANTY, EVEN IF D-LINKHAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. THE SOLE REMEDY FOR A BREACH OF THE FOREGOING LIMITED WARRANTY IS REPAIR, REPLACEMENT OR REFUND OF THE DEFECTIVE OR NON-CONFORMING PRODUCT. THE MAXIMUM LIABILITY OF D-LINK UNDER THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE PURCHASE PRICE OF THE PRODUCT COVERED BYTHE WARRANTY.THE FOREGOING EXPRESS WRITTEN WARRANTIES AND REMEDIES ARE EXCLUSIVE AND ARE IN LIEU OF ANY OTHER WARRANTIES OR REMEDIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY. Governing Law: This Limited Warranty shall be governed by the laws of the State of California. Some states do not allow exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, or limitations on how long an implied warranty lasts, so the foregoing limitations and exclusions may not apply. This limited warranty provides specific legal rights and the product owner may also have other rights which vary from state to state. Trademarks: D-Link is a registered trademark of D-Link Systems, Inc. Other trademarks or registered trademarks are the property of their respective manufacturers or owners. Copyright Statement: No part of this publication or documentation accompanying this Product may be reproduced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative such as translation, transformation, or adaptation without permission from D-Link Corporation/D-Link Systems, Inc., as stipulated by the United States Copyright Act of 1976. Contents are subject to change without prior notice. Copyright © 2002 by D-Link Corporation/ D-Link Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CE Mark Warning: This is a Class B product. In a domestic environment, this product may cause radio interference, in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures. FCC Statement: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate
182 radiofrequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communication. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:  Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.  Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.  Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.  Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for 184 compliance could void the user‘s authority to operate this equipment. This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. IMPORTANT NOTE: FCC Radiation Exposure Statement: This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with a minimum distance of about 8 inches (20 cm) between the radiator and your body. This transmitter must not be co-located or operated in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.  REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the U.S.A. is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the Canada is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the U.S.A. is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the Canada is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the U.S.A. is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. REMARK IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the Canada is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11. “Operation is subject to the following two conditions:(1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.”  “Operation is subject to the following two conditions:(1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.”  “Operation is subject to the following two conditions:(1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.”  REMARKIEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the U.S.A. is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11.REMARKIEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the Canada is firmware-limited to channels 1 through 11.“Operation is subject to the following two conditions:(1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.”
NCC Warning Statement  Article 12 Without permission, any company, firm or user shall not alter the frequency, increase the power, or change the characteristics and functions of the original design of the certified lower power frequency electric machinery.  Article 14 The application of low power frequency electric machineries shall not affect the navigation safety nor interfere a legal communication, if an interference is found, the service will be suspended until improvement is made and the interference no longer exists.  183

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