D Link IR505LA1 All-in-One Mobile Companion / Travel Cloud Router User Manual

D Link Corporation All-in-One Mobile Companion / Travel Cloud Router

User Manual

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Preface
D-Link reserves the right to revise this publication and to make changes in the content hereof without obligation to notify any
person or organization of such revisions or changes.
Manual Revisions
Revision
Date
1.0
January 11, 2012
Description
• Initial release for Revision A1
Trademarks
D-Link and the D-Link logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of D-Link Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United
States or other countries. All other company or product names mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of
their respective companies.
Copyright © 2011 by D-Link Systems, Inc.
All rights reserved. This publication may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without prior expressed written permission
from D-Link Systems, Inc.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Preface ................................................................................. i
Manual Revisions ........................................................................... i
Trademarks ...................................................................................... i
Product Overview .............................................................. 1
Package Contents ......................................................................... 1
System Requirements ................................................................. 2
Introduction ................................................................................... 3
Features............................................................................................ 4
Hardware Overview ..................................................................... 5
Connections ........................................................................... 5
LEDs ........................................................................................... 6
Installation ......................................................................... 7
Operation Modes.......................................................................... 7
Access Point Mode ............................................................... 8
Repeater Mode ...................................................................... 9
Hot Spot Mode ....................................................................10
Wireless Installation Considerations ....................................11
Manual Setup ...............................................................................12
Connect to an Existing Router ...............................................14
Coniguration ...................................................................16
Quick Router Setup Wizard (CD) ...........................................16
Quick Setup Wizard....................................................................18
Web-based Coniguration Utility ..........................................21
Internet Connection Setup .............................................22
Manual Internet Setup..............................................................27
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Dynamic (Cable) ..................................................................27
Internet Setup ......................................................................28
PPPoE .................................................................................28
Wireless Settings .................................................................29
Wireless Security Setup Wizard.................................30
Manual Coniguration ...............................................................32
Wireless Settings .................................................................32
Access Point Mode ........................................................33
Wireless Security .........................................................................35
What is WEP? ........................................................................35
Conigure WEP .............................................................................36
Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal .............................................37
Conigure WPA Enterprise .......................................................38
Network Settings ................................................................39
Router Settings ...............................................................39
DHCP Reservation .........................................................40
Storage ...................................................................................41
Advanced ......................................................................................42
Virtual Server ........................................................................42
Application Rules ................................................................43
MAC Address Filter .............................................................44
Website Filters ......................................................................45
Firewall Settings ..................................................................46
Advanced Wireless .............................................................47
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) ..........................................48
UPnP Settings.......................................................................50
ii
Table of Contents
Guest Zone ............................................................................51
DMZ .........................................................................................52
Maintance......................................................................................53
Admin .....................................................................................53
Time .........................................................................................54
System ....................................................................................55
Firmware ................................................................................56
Dynamic DNS .......................................................................57
System Check .......................................................................58
Schedules ..............................................................................59
Status ..............................................................................................60
Device Info ............................................................................60
Logs .........................................................................................61
Statistics .................................................................................62
Internet Sessions.................................................................63
Wireless .................................................................................64
Help .........................................................................................65
Quick Setup Wizard....................................................................66
Repeater Mode ....................................................................66
Setup Wizard ........................................................................68
To start the Setup Wizard click Next. ...........................68
Manual Coniguration ...............................................................70
Wireless Settings .................................................................70
Repeater Mode ...............................................................71
Wireless Security .........................................................................72
What is WEP? ........................................................................72
Conigure WEP .............................................................................73
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal .............................................74
LAN Settings .........................................................................75
Static IP ..............................................................................76
Advanced ......................................................................................77
Advanced Wireless .............................................................77
Wi-Fi Protected Setup ...............................................................78
Maintenance ................................................................................79
Admin .....................................................................................79
System ....................................................................................80
Language Pack.....................................................................81
Firmware ................................................................................81
Time .........................................................................................82
Status ..............................................................................................83
Device Info ............................................................................83
Logs .........................................................................................84
Statistics .................................................................................85
Quick Setup Wizard....................................................................86
WiFi Hot Spot........................................................................86
Setup ...............................................................................................90
Wi-Fi Hot Spot Setup .........................................................90
Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal .............................................92
WAN Settings .......................................................................93
Wireless Setup......................................................................94
Manual Wireless Settings .................................................95
LAN Setup..............................................................................96
Advanced ......................................................................................97
Advanced Wireless .............................................................97
Maintance......................................................................................98
Admin .....................................................................................98
iii
Table of Contents
System ....................................................................................99
Language Pack.................................................................. 100
Firmware ............................................................................. 100
Time ...................................................................................... 101
Status ........................................................................................... 102
Device Info ......................................................................... 102
Logs ...................................................................................... 103
Statistics .............................................................................. 104
Help .............................................................................................. 105
Technical Speciications..............................................132
Contacting Technical Support....................................133
GPL Code Statement...................................................134
Warranty.......................................................................149
Registration.................................................................156
Connect a Wireless Client to your Router ....................106
WPS Button ................................................................................ 106
Windows® 7................................................................................ 107
WPA/WPA2 ......................................................................... 107
WPS ....................................................................................... 110
Windows Vista®......................................................................... 114
WPA/WPA2 ......................................................................... 115
WPS/WCN 2.0 .................................................................... 117
Windows® XP ............................................................................. 118
WPA/WPA2 ......................................................................... 119
Troubleshooting ............................................................121
Wireless Basics ...............................................................125
What is Wireless? ...................................................................... 126
Tips................................................................................................ 128
Wireless Modes......................................................................... 129
Networking Basics .........................................................130
Check your IP address ............................................................ 130
Statically Assign an IP address ............................................ 131
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
iv
Section 1 - Product Overview
Product
PackageOverview
Contents
DIR-505 All-in-One Mobile Companion
Ethernet Cable
CD-ROM with Manual and Setup Wizard
If any of the above items are missing, please contact your reseller.
Note: Using a power supply with a diferent voltage rating than the one included with the DIR-505 will cause damage and void the warranty
for this product.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 1 - Product Overview
System Requirements
Network Requirements
• An Ethernet-based Cable or DSL modem
• IEEE 802.11n or 802.11g wireless clients
• IEEE 802.11a wireless clients
• 10/100/1000 Ethernet
Computer with the following:
• Windows®, Macintosh, or Linux-based operating system
• An installed Ethernet adapter
Web-based Coniguration
Utility Requirements
Browser Requirements:
• Internet Explorer 6 or higher
• Firefox 3.0 or higher
• Safari 3.0 or higher
• Chrome 2.0 or higher
Windows® Users: Make sure you have the latest version of Java
installed. Visit www.java.com to download the latest version.
CD Installation Wizard
Requirements
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Computer with the following:
• Windows® 7, Vista®, or XP (Service Pack 2 or higher)
• An installed Ethernet adapter
• CD-ROM drive
Section 1 - Product Overview
Introduction
TOTAL PERFORMANCE
Combines award winning router features and IEEE 802.11a/g/n wireless technology to provide the best wireless performance.
TOTAL SECURITY
The most complete set of security features including Active Firewall and WPA/WPA2 to protect your network against outside intruders.
TOTAL COVERAGE
Provides greater wireless signal rates even at farther distances for best-in-class Whole Home Coverage.
ULTIMATE PERFORMANCE
The D-Link All-in-One Mobile Companion (DIR-505) is a 802.11n/802.11a compliant device that delivers real world performance of up to
14x faster than an 802.11g wireless connection (also faster than a 100Mbps wired Ethernet connection). Create a secure wireless network
to share photos, iles, music, video, printers, and network storage throughout your home. Connect the DIR-505 router to a cable or DSL
modem and share your high-speed Internet access with everyone on the network. In addition, this Router includes a Quality of Service
(QoS) engine that keeps digital phone calls (VoIP) and online gaming smooth and responsive, providing a better Internet experience.
EXTENDED WHOLE HOME COVERAGE
Powered by Wireless N technology, this high performance router provides superior Whole Home Coverage while reducing dead spots.
The router is designed for use in bigger homes and for users who demand higher performance networking. Add a Wireless N notebook
or desktop adapter and stay connected to your network from virtually anywhere in your home.
TOTAL NETWORK SECURITY
The Wireless N router supports all of the latest wireless security features to prevent unauthorized access, be it from over the wireless
network or from the Internet. Support for WPA/WPA2 standards ensure that you’ll be able to use the best possible encryption method,
regardless of your client devices. In addition, this router utilizes dual active irewalls (SPI and NAT) to prevent potential attacks from
across the Internet.
* Maximum wireless signal rate derived from IEEE Standard 802.11a, 802.11g and 802.11n speciications. Actual data throughput will vary. Network conditions and environmental
factors, including volume of network traic, building materials and construction, and network overhead, lower actual data throughput rate. Environmental conditions will
adversely afect wireless signal range.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 1 - Product Overview
Features
• Faster Wireless Networking - The DIR-505 provides up to 300Mbps* wireless connection with other 802.11n
wireless clients. This capability allows users to participate in real-time activities online, such as video streaming,
online gaming, and real-time audio. The performance of this 802.11n wireless router gives you the freedom of
wireless networking at speeds 14x faster than 802.11g.
• Compatible with 802.11a/g Devices - The DIR-505 is still fully compatible with the IEEE 802.11g and 802.11a
standards, so it can connect with existing 802.11g and 802.11a PCI, USB, and Cardbus adapters.
• Advanced Firewall Features - The Web-based user interface displays a number of advanced network
management features including:
• Content Filtering - Easily applied content iltering based on MAC Address, URL, and/or Domain
Name.
• Filter Scheduling - These ilters can be scheduled to be active on certain days or for a duration of
hours or minutes.
• Secure Multiple/Concurrent Sessions - The DIR-505 can pass through VPN sessions. It supports
multiple and concurrent IPSec and PPTP sessions, so users behind the DIR-505 can securely access
corporate networks.
• User-friendly Setup Wizard - Through its easy-to-use Web-based user interface, the DIR-505 lets you control what
information is accessible to those on the wireless network, whether from the Internet or from your company’s
server. Conigure your router to your speciic settings within minutes.
* Maximum wireless signal rate derived from IEEE Standard 802.11g, 802.11a, and 802.11n speciications. Actual data throughput will vary. Network conditions and environmental
factors, including volume of network traic, building materials and construction, and network overhead, lower actual data throughput rate. Environmental conditions will
adversely afect wireless signal range.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 1 - Product Overview
Hardware Overview
Connections
Connect a USB 1.1 or 2.0 lash drive to conigure the wireless settings using WCN and SharePort. SharePort
allows you to share a printer or storage device with your local network.
USB Port
Reset Button
Pressing the Reset button restores the router to its original factory default settings.
Ethernet Port
The auto MDI/MDIX Internet port is the connection for the Ethernet cable to the cable or DSL modem.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 1 - Product Overview
Hardware Overview
LEDs
LED Indicator
Color
Green
Status
Description
Solid Green
The device is powered ON and operating properly
Blinking Green
The device is processing WPS
Light of
The device is of
Solid Red
During Power ON or system is defective
Blinking Red
The device is under recovery mode
Light of
The device is powered of
Power/Status
Red
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 1 - Product Overview
Installation
Please conigure the DIR-505 with a computer connected directly to the AP. The next few pages will explain the diferent
operational modes you can use.
Operation Modes
Depending on how you want to use your DIR-505 will determine which mode you use. This section will help you igure out
which setting works with your setup.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Access Point mode - page 13
Wireless Client mode - page 14
Range Extender Mode - page 15
Bridge mode - page 16
Bridge with AP mode - page 17
WISP Client Router mode - page 18
WISP Range Extender Mode - page 19
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 2 - Installation
Access Point Mode
In the Access Point mode, the DIR-505 acts as a central connection point for any computer (client) that has a 802.11n or
backward-compatible 802.11g wireless network interface and is within range of the AP. Clients must use the same SSID (wireless
network name) and channel as the AP in order to connect. If wireless security is enabled on the AP, the client will need to enter
a password to connect to the AP. In Access Point mode, multiple clients can connect to the AP at the same time.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 2 - Installation
Repeater Mode
In the Wireless Client mode, the DIR-505 acts as a wireless network adapter for your Ethernet-enabled device (such as a game
console or a TV set-top box). Connect your Ethernet-enabled device to the AP using an Ethernet cable. The AP Client mode
can support multiple wired clients.
If you are going to connect several Ethernet-enabled devices to your DIR-505, connect the LAN port of the DIR-505 to an
Ethernet switch, then connect your devices to this switch.
Example: Connect a gaming console using an ethernet cable to the DIR-505. The unit is set to Wireless Client mode which will
wirelessly connect to a wireless router on your network.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
Section 2 - Installation
Hot Spot Mode
In Range Extender Mode, the DIR-505 increases the range of your wireless network by extending the wireless coverage of
another AP or wireless router. The APs and wireless router (if used) must be within range of each other. Make sure that all clients,
APs, and the wireless router all use the same SSID (wireless network name), channel, and security settings.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
10
Section 2 - Installation
Wireless Installation Considerations
The D-Link wireless router lets you access your network using a wireless connection from virtually anywhere within the
operating range of your wireless network. Keep in mind, however, that the number, thickness and location of walls, ceilings,
or other objects that the wireless signals must pass through, may limit the range. Typical ranges vary depending on the types
of materials and background RF (radio frequency) noise in your home or business. The key to maximizing wireless range is to
follow these basic guidelines:
1. Keep the number of walls and ceilings between the D-Link router and other network devices to a minimum each wall or ceiling can reduce your adapter’s range from 3-90 feet (1-30 meters.) Position your devices so that
the number of walls or ceilings is minimized.
2. Be aware of the direct line between network devices. A wall that is 1.5 feet thick (.5 meters), at a 45-degree angle
appears to be almost 3 feet (1 meter) thick. At a 2-degree angle it looks over 42 feet (14 meters) thick! Position
devices so that the signal will travel straight through a wall or ceiling (instead of at an angle) for better reception.
3. Building Materials make a diference. A solid metal door or aluminum studs may have a negative efect on range.
Try to position access points, wireless routers, and computers so that the signal passes through drywall or open
doorways. Materials and objects such as glass, steel, metal, walls with insulation, water (ish tanks), mirrors, ile
cabinets, brick, and concrete will degrade your wireless signal.
4. Keep your product away (at least 3-6 feet or 1-2 meters) from electrical devices or appliances that generate RF
noise.
5. If you are using 2.4GHz cordless phones or X-10 (wireless products such as ceiling fans, lights, and home security
systems), your wireless connection may degrade dramatically or drop completely. Make sure your 2.4GHz phone
base is as far away from your wireless devices as possible. The base transmits a signal even if the phone in not
in use.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 2 - Installation
Manual Setup
Important: for best results, insert the Installation CD and follow the on-screen instructions. If you are unable to use the CD or
are using Mac or Linux, please use the following installation steps:
1. Turn of and unplug your cable or DSL broadband modem. This is required.
2. Position your router close to your modem and a computer. Place the router in an open area of your intended
work area for better wireless coverage.
3. Unplug the Ethernet cable from your modem (or existing router if upgrading) that is connected to your computer.
Plug it into the blue port labeled 1 on the back of your router. The router is now connected to your computer.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 2 - Installation
4. Plug one end of the included blue Ethernet cable that came with your router into the yellow port labeled
INTERNET on the back of the router. Plug the other end of this cable into the Ethernet port on your modem.
5. Reconnect the power adapter to your cable or DSL broadband modem and wait for two minutes.
6. Connect the supplied power adapter into the power port on the back of the router and then plug it into a power
outlet or surge protector. Press the power button and verify that the power LED is lit. Allow 1 minute for the
router to boot up.
7. If you are connecting to a Broadband service that uses a dynamic connection (not PPPoE), you may be online
already. Try opening a web browser and enter a web site. If you connect, you are inished with your Internet setup.
Please skip to page 13 to conigure your router and use the manual setup procedure to conigure your network
and wireless settings. If you did not connect to the Internet, use the D-Link Setup Wizard (refer to page 15).
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
13
Section 2 - Installation
Connect to an Existing Router
Note: It is strongly recommended to replace your existing router with the DIR-505 instead of using both. If your modem is a combo
router, you may want to contact your ISP or manufacturer’s user guide to put the router into Bridge mode, which will ‘turn of’ the
router (NAT) functions.
If you are connecting the DIR-505 router to an existing router to use as a wireless access point and/or switch, you will have to
do the following to the DIR-505 before connecting it to your network:
• Disable UPnP™
• Disable DHCP
• Change the LAN IP address to an available address on your network. The LAN ports on the router cannot accept
a DHCP address from your other router.
To connect to another router, please follow the steps below:
1. Plug the power into the router. Connect one of your computers to the router (LAN port) using an Ethernet cable. Make sure
your IP address on the computer is 192.168.0.xxx (where xxx is between 2 and 254). Please see the Networking Basics
section for more information. If you need to change the settings, write down your existing settings before making any
changes. In most cases, your computer should be set to receive an IP address automatically in which case you will not have
to do anything to your computer.
2. Open a web browser, enter http://192.168.0.1 and press Enter. When the login window appears, set the user name to
Admin and leave the password box empty. Click Log In to continue.
3. Click on Advanced and then click Advanced Network. Uncheck the Enable UPnP checkbox. Click Save Settings to continue.
4. Click Setup and then click Network Settings. Uncheck the Enable DHCP Server checkbox. Click Save Settings to continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
14
Section 2 - Installation
5. Under Router Settings, enter an available IP address and the subnet mask of your network. Click Save Settings to save your
settings. Use this new IP address to access the coniguration utility of the router in the future. Close the browser and change
your computer’s IP settings back to the original values as in Step 1.
6. Disconnect the Ethernet cable from the router and reconnect your computer to your network.
7. Connect an Ethernet cable in one of the LAN ports of the router and connect it to your other router. Do not plug anything
into the Internet (WAN) port of the D-Link router.
8. You may now use the other 3 LAN ports to connect other Ethernet devices and computers. To conigure your wireless network,
open a web browser and enter the IP address you assigned to the router. Refer to the Coniguration and Wireless Security
sections for more information on setting up your wireless network.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 2 - Installation
Coniguration
There are several diferent ways you can conigure your router to connect to the Internet and connect to your clients:
• Quick Router Setup Wizard - Insert the supplied CD and launch the setup wizard (see below).
• D-Link Setup Wizard - This wizard will launch if you do not run the CD wizard and log into the router for the irst time.
Refer to page 15.
• Manual Setup - Log into the router and manually conigure your router (advanced users only). Refer to page 21.
Quick Router Setup Wizard (CD)
To run the Quick Router Setup Wizard, insert the CD in the CD-ROM drive. When the autorun screen appears, click English
(or French), and then click the Install button.
Note: If the CD Autorun function does not automatically start on your computer, go to Start > Run. In the run box type D:\autorun.exe
(where D: represents the drive letter of your CD-ROM drive).
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
When the Wizard appears, select your language from the drop-down menu and then click Next to continue. Follow the on-screen
instructions to conigure your router.
Once you are inished, you may skip to page 21 and will be able to log into the web-based coniguration utility and conigure
more advanced features.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Quick Setup Wizard
If this is your irst time installing the router, open your web
browser. You will automatically be directed to the Wizard Setup
Screen.
If you have already conigured your settings and you would like
to access the coniguration utility, please refer to page 20.
If you did not run the setup wizard from the CD and this is the irst
time logging into the router, this wizard will start automatically.
This wizard is designed to guide you through a step-by-step
process to conigure your new D-Link router and connect to the
Internet.
Click Next to continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Please wait while your router detects your internet connection type.
If the router detects your Internet connection, you may need to enter
your ISP information such as username and password.
Create a wireless security passphrase or key (between 8-63 characters).
Your wireless clients will need to have this passphrase or key entered
to be able to connect to your wireless network.
Click Next to continue.
In order to secure your router, please enter a new password. Check the
Enable Graphical Authentication box to enable CAPTCHA authentication
for added security. Click Next to continue.
Select your time zone from the drop-down menu and click Next to
continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
The Setup Complete window will display your wireless settings. Click
Save to continue.
If you want to create a bookmark to the router, click OK. Click Cancel if
you do not want to create a bookmark.
If you clicked Yes, a window may appear (depending on what web
browser you are using) to create a bookmark.
The router will now reboot. Please allow a minute or two. Click the
Continue button once it is active.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Web-based Coniguration Utility
To access the coniguration utility, open a web-browser such
as Internet Explorer and enter the IP address of the router
(http://192.168.0.1).
Windows and Mac users may also connect by typing
http://dlinkrouter or http://dlinkrouter.local in the address bar.
Select Admin from the drop-down menu and then enter your
password. Leave the password blank by default.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Internet Connection Setup
Click Manual Internet Connection Setup to conigure your
connection manually and continue to the next page.
If you want to conigure your router to connect to the Internet
using the wizard, click Internet Connection Setup Wizard.
You will be directed to the Quick Setup Wizard. Please skip
to page 24.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
If you did not run the setup wizard from the CD and this is the irst
time logging into the router, this wizard will start automatically.
This wizard is designed to guide you through a step-by-step process
to conigure your new D-Link router and connect to the Internet.
Click Next to continue.
In order to secure your router, please enter a new password. Check
the Enable Graphical Authentication box to enable CAPTCHA
authentication for added security. Click Next to continue.
Select your time zone from the drop-down menu and click Next
to continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Select your Internet connection type and click Next to continue.
Verify that you are connected to the D-Link Router with the PC
that was originally connected to your broadband connection,
and if you are, then click the Clone MAC button to copy your
computer’s MAC Address.
Click Next to continue.
Your setup is complete. Click Connect to save your settings and
reboot your router.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
If the router detected or you selected PPPoE, enter your PPPoE
username and password and click Next to continue.
Note: Make sure to remove your PPPoE software from your computer.
The software is no longer needed and will not work through a router.
If the router detected or you selected PPTP, enter your PPTP
username, password, and other information supplied by your ISP.
Click Next to continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
If the router detected or you selected L2TP, enter your L2TP
username, password, and other information supplied by your ISP.
Click Next to continue.
If the router detected or you selected Static, enter the IP and DNS
settings supplied by your ISP. Click Next to continue.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Manual Internet Setup
Dynamic (Cable)
My Internet Select Dynamic IP (DHCP) to obtain IP Address information
Connection: automatically from your ISP. Select this option if your ISP does
not give you any IP numbers to use. This option is commonly
used for cable modem services.
Host Name: The Host Name is optional but may be required by some ISPs.
Leave blank if you are not sure.
Use Unicasting: Check the box if you are having problems obtaining an IP
address from your ISP.
Primary/Secondary Enter the Primary and secondary DNS server IP addresses
DNS Server: assigned by your ISP. These addresses are usually obtained
automatically from your ISP. Leave at 0.0.0.0 if you did not
speciically receive these from your ISP.
MTU: Maximum Transmission Unit - you may need to change the
MTU for optimal performance with your speciic ISP. 1500 is
the default MTU.
MAC Address: The default MAC Address is set to the Internet port’s physical
interface MAC address on the Broadband Router. It is not
recommended that you change the default MAC address unless
required by your ISP. You can use the Copy Your PC’s MAC
Address button to replace the Internet port’s MAC address
with the MAC address of your Ethernet card.
D-Link DIR-505 User Manual
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Internet Setup
PPPoE
Choose PPPoE (Point to Point Protocol over Ethernet) if your ISP uses a PPPoE connection. Your ISP will provide you with a
username and password. This option is typically used for DSL services. Make sure to remove your PPPoE software from your
computer. The software is no longer needed and will not work through a router.
My Internet Select PPPoE (Username/Password) from the drop-down menu.
Connection:
Address Mode: Select Static IP if your ISP assigned you the IP address, subnet mask, gateway,
and DNS server addresses. In most cases, select Dynamic.
IP Address: Enter the IP address (Static PPPoE only).
User Name: Enter your PPPoE user name.
Password: Enter your PPPoE password and then retype the password in the next box.
Service Name: Enter the ISP Service Name (optional).
Reconnect Select either Always-on, On-Demand, or Manual.
Mode:
Maximum Idle Enter a maximum idle time during which the Internet connection is maintained
Time: during inactivity. To disable this feature, enable Auto-reconnect.
Primary DNS Enter the Primary and Secondary DNS Server Addresses (Static PPPoE only).
Server:
MTU: Maximum Transmission Unit - you may need to change the MTU for optimal
performance with your speciic ISP. 1492 is the default MTU.
MAC Address: The default MAC Address is set to the Internet port’s physical interface MAC
address on the Broadband Router. It is not recommended that you change the default MAC address unless required by your ISP.
You can use the Copy Your PC’s MAC Address button to replace the Internet port’s MAC address with the MAC address of your
Ethernet card.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Wireless Settings
If you want to conigure the wireless settings on your router using
the wizard, click Wireless Security Setup Wizard and refer to
page 38.
Click Add Wireless Device with WPS if you want to add a wireless
device using Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) and refer to page 41.
If you want to manually conigure the wireless settings on your
router click Manual Wireless Network Setup and refer to the
next page.
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Section 4 - Security
Wireless Security Setup Wizard
To run the security wizard, click on Setup at the top and then click
Wireless Network Setup Wizard.
Check the Manually set 5GHz band Network Name... box to
manually set your desired wireless network name for the 5GHz band.
Type your desired wireless network name (SSID).
Automatically: Select this option to automatically generate
the router’s network key and click Next.
Manually: Select this option to manually enter your network
key and click Next.
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If you selected Automatically, the summary window will display
your settings. Write down the security key and enter this on your
wireless clients. Click Save to save your settings.
Select Manually to manually enter your network key and click
Next.
If you selected Manually, the following screen will appear once
the setup is complete.
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Manual Coniguration
Wireless Settings
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Access Point Mode
Enable Wireless: Check the box to enable the wireless function. If
you do not want to use wireless, uncheck the box to
disable all the wireless functions. You may also set up
a speciic time range (schedule). Select a schedule
from the drop-down menu or click Add New to create
a new schedule.
Wireless Mode: Select Access Point from the drop-down menu.
Wireless When you are browsing for available wireless
Network Name: networks, this is the name that will appear in the list
(unless Visibility Status is set to Invisible, see below).
This name is also referred to as the SSID. For security
purposes, it is highly recommended to change from
the default network name.
802.11 Mode: Select one of the following:
802.11b Only - Select if you are only using 802.11b
wireless clients.
802.11g Only - Select if you are only using 802.11g
wireless clients.
802.11n Only - Select if you are only using 802.11n wireless clients.
Mixed 802.11g and 802.11b - Select if you are using a mix of 802.11g and 11b wireless clients.
Mixed 802.11n and 802.11g - Select if you are using a mix of 802.11n and 11g wireless clients.
Mixed 802.11n, 802.11g and 802.11b - Select if you are using a mix of 802.11n, 11g, and 11b wireless clients.
Wireless Indicates the channel setting for the DIR-505. The Channel can be changed to it the channel setting for an existing wireless
Channel: network or to customize the wireless network. If you enable Auto Channel Scan, this option will be grayed out.
Enable Auto The Auto Channel Scan setting can be selected to allow the DIR-505 to choose the channel with the least amount of interference.
Channel Scan:
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Section 4 - Security
Channel Width: Select the Channel Width:
Auto 20/40 - Select if you are using both 802.11n and non-802.11n wireless devices.
20MHz - Select if you are not using any 802.11n wireless clients.
Visibility Status: Check the box if you do not want the SSID of your wireless network to be broadcasted by the DIR-505. If checked, the SSID of
the DIR-505 will not be seen by Site Survey utilities so your wireless clients will have to know the SSID of your DIR-505 in order
to connect to it.
Security Mode: Refer to page 30 for more information regarding the wireless security.
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Section 4 - Security
Wireless Security
This section will show you the diferent levels of security you can use to protect your data from intruders. The
DIR-605L ofers the following types of security:
• WPA2 (Wi-Fi Protected Access 2)
• WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access)
• WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy)
• WPA2-PSK (Pre-Shared Key)
• WPA-PSK (Pre-Shared Key)
What is WEP?
WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy. It is based on the IEEE 802.11 standard and uses the RC4 encryption algorithm. WEP
provides security by encrypting data over your wireless network so that it is protected as it is transmitted from one wireless
device to another.
To gain access to a WEP network, you must know the key. The key is a string of characters that you create. When using WEP,
you must determine the level of encryption. The type of encryption determines the key length. 128-bit encryption requires a
longer key than 64-bit encryption. Keys are deined by entering in a string in HEX (hexadecimal - using characters 0-9, A-F) or
ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange – alphanumeric characters) format. ASCII format is provided so
you can enter a string that is easier to remember. The ASCII string is converted to HEX for use over the network. Four keys can
be deined so that you can change keys easily.
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Section 4 - Security
Conigure WEP
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless router before your wireless network adapters. Please establish
wireless connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless signal may degrade when enabling encryption due to the
added overhead.
1. Log into the web-based coniguration by opening a web browser and entering the IP address of the router (192.168.0.1).
Click on Wireless Setup on the left side.
2. In the Security Mode section, select WEP from the drop-down
menu.
3. In WEP Key Length, select either 64Bit or 128Bit encryption from
the drop-down menu.
5. Next to WEP Key 1, enter a WEP key that you create. Make sure
you enter this key exactly on all your wireless devices. You may
enter up to four diferent keys either using Hex or ASCII. Hex is
recommended (letters A-F and numbers 0-9 are valid). In ASCII all
numbers and letters are valid.
6. Click Save Settings to save your settings. If you are coniguring
the router with a wireless adapter, you will lose connectivity until
you enable WEP on your adapter and enter the same WEP key as
you did on the router.
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Section 4 - Security
Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless access
point before your wireless network adapters. Please establish
wireless connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless
signal may degrade when enabling encryption due to the added
overhead.
1. Log into the web-based coniguration by opening a web browser
and entering the IP address of the access point (192.168.0.50).
Click on Setup and then click Wireless Settings on the left side.
2. Next to Security Mode, select WPA-Personal.
3. Next to Cipher Type, select TKIP, AES, or Auto.
4. Next to Passphrase, enter a key. The key is entered as a passphrase
in ASCII format at both ends of the wireless connection. The
passphrase must be between 8-63 characters.
6. Click Save Settings at the top of the window to save your settings.
If you are coniguring the access point with a wireless adapter, you will lose connectivity until you enable WPA-PSK on your
adapter and enter the same passphrase as you did on the access point.
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Section 4 - Security
Conigure WPA Enterprise
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless access
point before your wireless network adapters. Please establish wireless
connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless signal may
degrade when enabling encryption due to the added overhead.
1. Log into the web-based coniguration by opening a web browser
and entering the IP address of the access point (192.168.0.50). Click
on Setup and then click Wireless Settings on the left side.
2. Next to Security Mode, select WPA-Enterprise.
3. Next to WPA Mode select Auto (WPA or WPA2).
4. Next to Cipher Mode, select TKIP, AES, or Auto.
5. Next to RADIUS Server, enter the IP Address of your RADIUS server.
6. Next to RADIUS Server Port, enter the port you are using with your
RADIUS server. 1812 is the default port.
7. Next to Shared Secret, enter the security key.
8. Click Save Settings to save your settings.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Network Settings
This section will allow you to change the local network settings of the router and to conigure the DHCP settings.
Router Settings
Router IP Enter the IP address of the router. The default IP address
Address: is 192.168.0.1.
If you change the IP address, once you click Save Settings,
you will need to enter the new IP address in your browser
to get back into the coniguration utility.
Subnet Mask: Enter the Subnet Mask. The default subnet mask is
255.255.255.0.
Device Name: Enter a name for the router.
Local Domain: Enter the Domain name (Optional).
Enable DNS Uncheck the box to transfer the DNS server information
Relay: from your ISP to your computers. If checked, your
computers will use the router for a DNS server.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
DHCP Reservation
If you want a computer or device to always have the same IP address assigned, you can create a DHCP reservation. The router will assign the IP
address only to that computer or device.
Note: This IP address must be within the DHCP IP Address Range.
Enable: Check this box to enable the reservation.
Computer Name: Enter the computer name or select from the drop-down
menu and click <<.
IP Address: Enter the IP address you want to assign to the computer
or device. This IP Address must be within the DHCP IP
Address Range.
MAC Address: Enter the MAC address of the computer or device.
Clone Your PC’s If you want to assign an IP address to the computer you
MAC Address: are currently on, click this button to populate the ields.
Save: Click Save to save your entry. You must click Save Settings
at the top to activate your reservations.
DHCP Reservations List
DHCP Displays any reservation entries. Displays the host name
Reservations List: (name of your computer or device), MAC Address, and IP
address.
Enable: Check to enable the reservation.
Edit: Click the edit icon to make changes to the reservation entry.
Delete: Click to remove the reservation from the list.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Storage
This page will allow you to access iles from a USB external hard drive or thumb drive that is plugged into the router from your
local network or from the Internet using either a web browser or an app for your smartphone or tablet. You can create users
to be allowed to access these iles.
Enable Web File Check to enable sharing iles on your USB storage device
Access: that is plugged in your router.
Enable HTTP Check to enable HTTP access to your router’s storage. You
Storage Remote will have to type HTTP in the URL.
Access:
Remote Access Enter a port (8181 is default). You will have to enter this port
Port: in the URL when connecting to the shared iles. For example:
(http://192.168.0.1:8181).
Enable HTTPS Check to enable HTTPS (secure) access to your router’s
Storage Remote storage. You will have to type HTTPS in the URL.
Access:
Remote HTTPS Enter a port (4433 is default). You will have to enter this port
Port: in the URL when connecting to the shared iles. For example:
(https://192.168.0.1:8181).
User Name: To create a new user, enter a user name.
Password: Enter a password for this account.
Verify Password: Re-enter the password. Click Add/Edit to create the user.
User List: Displays the accounts. The Admin and Guest accounts are
built-in to the router.
Number of Displays the USB device plugged into the router.
Devices:
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Advanced
Virtual Server
This will allow you to open a single port. If you would like to open a range of ports, refer to the next page.
Name: Enter a name for the rule or select an application from
the drop-down menu. Select an application and click
<< to populate the ields.
IP Address: Enter the IP address of the computer on your local
network that you want to allow the incoming
service to. If your computer is receiving an IP address
automatically from the router (DHCP), you computer
will be listed in the “Computer Name” drop-down
menu. Select your computer and click <<.
Private Port/ Enter the port that you want to open next to Private
Public Port: Port and Public Port. The private and public ports are
usually the same. The public port is the port seen from
the Internet side, and the private port is the port being
used by the application on the computer within your
local network.
Protocol Type: Select TCP, UDP, or Both from the drop-down menu.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Application Rules
Some applications require multiple connections, such as Internet gaming, video conferencing, Internet telephony and others.
These applications have diiculties working through NAT (Network Address Translation). Special Applications makes some of
these applications work with the DIR-505. If you need to run applications that require multiple connections, specify the port
normally associated with an application in the “Trigger Port” ield, select the protocol type as TCP or UDP, then enter the irewall
(public) ports associated with the trigger port to open them for inbound traic.
The DIR-505 provides some predeined applications in the table on the bottom of the web page. Select the application you
want to use and enable it.
Name: Enter a name for the rule. You may select a
pre-deined application from the drop-down menu
and click <<.
Trigger: This is the port used to trigger the application. It
can be either a single port or a range of ports.
Traic Type: Select the protocol of the trigger port (TCP, UDP,
or Both).
Firewall: This is the port number on the Internet side that
will be used to access the application. You may
deine a single port or a range of ports. You can
use a comma to add multiple ports or port ranges.
Traic Type: Select the protocol of the irewall port (TCP, UDP,
or Both).
Schedule: The schedule of time when the Application Rule
will be enabled. The schedule may be set to Always,
which will allow the particular service to always
be enabled. You can create your own times in the
Tools > Schedules section.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
MAC Address Filter
The MAC address ilter section can be used to ilter network access by machines based on the unique MAC addresses of their
network adapter(s). It is most useful to prevent unauthorized wireless devices from connecting to your network. A MAC address
is a unique ID assigned by the manufacturer of the network adapter.
Conigure When you Turn MAC Filtering OFF is selected, MAC
MAC Filtering: addresses are not used to control network access. When
Turn MAC Filtering ON and ALLOW computers listed
to access the network is selected, only computers with
MAC addresses listed in the MAC Address List are granted
network access. When Turn MAC Filtering ON and DENY
computers listed to access the network is selected, any
computer with a MAC address listed in the MAC Address
List is refused access to the network.
Add MAC This parameter allows you to manually add a MAC iltering
Filtering rule. Click the Add button to add the new MAC iltering rule
Rule: to the MAC Filtering Rules list at the bottom of this screen.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Website Filters
Website Filters are used to allow you to set up a list of Web sites that can be viewed by multiple users through the network.
To use this feature select to Allow or Deny, enter the domain or website and click Save Settings. You must also select Apply
Web Filter under the Access Control section (page 33).
Add Website Select either DENY computers access to ONLY
Filtering Rule: these sites or ALLOW computers access to ONLY
these sites.
Website URL/ Enter the keywords or URLs that you want to allow
Domain: or block. Click Save Settings.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Firewall Settings
A irewall protects your network from the outside world. The DIR-505 ofers a irewall type functionality. The SPI feature helps
prevent cyber attacks. Sometimes you may want a computer exposed to the outside world for certain types of applications.
If you choose to expose a computer, you can enable DMZ. DMZ is short for Demilitarized Zone. This option will expose the
chosen computer completely to the outside world.
Enable SPI: SPI (Stateful Packet Inspection, also known as dynamic
packet iltering) helps to prevent cyber attacks by tracking
more state per session. It validates that the traic passing
through the session conforms to the protocol.
Anti-Spoof Enable this feature to protect your network from certain
Check: kinds of “spooing” attacks.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Advanced Wireless
Transmit Set the transmit power of the antennas.
Power:
WMM Enable: WMM is QoS for your wireless network. This will improve
the quality of video and voice applications for your
wireless clients.
Short GI: Check this box to reduce the guard interval time therefore
increasing the data capacity. However, it’s less reliable
and may create higher data loss.
IGMP Check to enable this feature.
Snooping:
WLAN This enables 802.11d operation. 802.11d is a wireless
Partition: specification developed to allow implementation of
wireless networks in countries that cannot use the 802.11
standard. This feature should only be enabled if you are
in a country that requires it.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS)
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) System is a simpliied method for securing your wireless network during the “Initial setup” as well
as the “Add New Device” processes. The Wi-Fi Alliance (WFA) has certiied it across diferent products as well as manufactures.
The process is just as easy as pressing a button for the Push-Button Method or correctly entering the 8-digit code for the Pin
Code Method. The time reduction in setup and ease of use are quite beneicial, while the highest wireless Security setting of
WPA2 is automatically used.
Enable: Enable the Wi-Fi Protected Setup feature.
Note: if this option is unchecked, the WPS button on the
side of the router will be disabled.
Lock Wireless Locking the wireless security settings prevents the
Security settings from being changed by the Wi-Fi Protected
Settings: Setup feature of the router. Devices can still be added
to the network using Wi-Fi Protected Setup. However,
the settings of the network will not change once this
option is checked.
PIN Settings: A PIN is a unique number that can be used to add
the router to an existing network or to create a new
network. Only the Administrator (“admin” account) can
change or reset the PIN.
Current PIN: Shows the current PIN.
Reset PIN to Restore the default PIN of the router.
Default:
Generate New Create a random number that is a valid PIN. This becomes
PIN: the router’s PIN. You can then copy this PIN to the user
interface of the wireless client.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Add Wireless This Wizard helps you add wireless devices to the wireless network.
Station:
The wizard will either display the wireless network settings to guide you through manual coniguration, prompt you to enter the
PIN for the device, or ask you to press the coniguration button on the device. If the device supports Wi-Fi Protected Setup and has a
coniguration button, you can add it to the network by pressing the coniguration button on the device and then the on the router
within 60 seconds. The status LED on the router will lash three times if the device has been successfully added to the network.
There are several ways to add a wireless device to your network. A “registrar” controls access to the wireless network. A registrar
only allows devices onto the wireless network if you have entered the PIN, or pressed a special Wi-Fi Protected Setup button on the
device. The router acts as a registrar for the network, although other devices may act as a registrar as well.
Add Wireless Click to start the wizard.
Device Wizard:
WPS Button
You can also simply press the WPS button on the side of the router, and then press the WPS
button on your wireless client to automatically connect without logging into the router.
Refer to page 106 for more information.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
UPnP Settings
Enable UPnP: To use the Universal Plug and Play (UPnP™) feature click on
Enabled. UPnP provides compatibility with networking
equipment, software and peripherals.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Guest Zone
The Guest Zone feature will allow you to create temporary zones that can be used by guests to access the Internet. These zones
will be separate from your main wireless network. You may conigure diferent zones for the 2.4GHz and 5GHz wireless bands.
Enable Guest Check to enable the Guest Zone feature.
Zone:
Add New The schedule of time when the Guest Zone will be
Schedule: active. The schedule may be set to Always, which will
allow the particular service to always be enabled. You
can create your own times in the Tools > Schedules
section.
Wireless Enter a wireless network name (SSID) that is diferent
Network Name: from your main wireless network.
Enable Routing Check to allow network connectivity between the
Between Zones: diferent zones created.
Security Mode: Select the type of security or encryption you would
like to enable for the guest zone.
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DMZ
This feature allows you to set a single computer from your network to outside of the router and get unrestricted Internet access.
Enable DMZ: Check the box to enable DMZ.
DMZ IP Address: Enter the DMZ IP Address.
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Maintance
Admin
This page will allow you to change the Administrator and User passwords. You can also enable Remote Management. There are
two accounts that can access the management interface through the web browser. The accounts are admin and user. Admin
has read/write access while user has read-only access. User can only view the settings but cannot make any changes. Only the
admin account has the ability to change both admin and user account passwords.
Admin Enter a new password for the Administrator Login Name. The
Password: administrator can make changes to the settings.
User Password: Enter the new password for the User login. If you login as the User,
you cannot change the settings (you can only view them).
Enable Graphical Enables a challenge-response test to require users to type letters
Authentication: or numbers from a distorted image displayed on the screen to
prevent online hackers and unauthorized users from gaining
access to your router’s network settings.
Enable HTTPS Check to enable HTTPS to connect to the router securely. This
Server: means to connect to the router, you must enter https://192.168.0.1
(for example) instead of http://192.168.0.1.
Enable Remote Remote management allows the DIR-505 to be conigured from the Internet by a web browser. A username/password is still required to
Management: access the Web Management interface.
Remote Admin The port number used to access the DIR-505 is used in the URL. Example: http://x.x.x.x:8080 whereas x.x.x.x is the Internet IP address of
Port: the DIR-505 and 8080 is the port used for the Web Management interface.
If you have enabled HTTPS Server, you must enter https:// as part of the URL to access the router remotely.
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Time
The Time Coniguration option allows you to conigure, update, and maintain the correct time on the internal system clock.
From this section you can set the time zone that you are in and set the Time Server. Daylight Saving can also be conigured to
automatically adjust the time when needed.
Current Router Displays the current date and time of the router.
Time:
Time Zone: Select your Time Zone from the drop-down menu.
Enable Daylight To select Daylight Saving time manually, select enabled
Saving: or disabled, and enter a start date and an end date for
daylight saving time.
Enable NTP Server: NTP is short for Network Time Protocol. A NTP server will
synch the time and date with your router. This will only
connect to a server on the Internet, not a local server.
Check the box to enable this feature.
NTP Server Used: Enter the IP address of a NTP server or select one from
the drop-down menu.
Set the Date and To manually input the time, enter the values in these
Time Manually: ields for the Year, Month, Day, Hour, Minute, and Second
and then click Set Time.
You can also click Copy Your Computer’s Time Settings
to synch the date and time with the computer you are
currently on.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
System
This section allows you to manage the router’s coniguration settings, reboot the router, and restore the router to the factory
default settings. Restoring the unit to the factory default settings will erase all settings, including any rules that you’ve created.
Save Settings Use this option to save the current router coniguration
to Local Hard settings to a ile on the hard disk of the computer you
Drive: are using. First, click the Save button. A ile dialog will
appear, allowing you to select a location and ile name
for the settings.
Load Settings Use this option to load previously saved router coniguration
from Local Hard settings. First, use the Browse option to ind a previously
Drive: saved ile of coniguration settings. Then, click the Upload
Settings button below to transfer those settings to the
router.
Restore to This option will restore all coniguration settings back
Factory Default to the settings that were in efect at the time the router
Settings: was shipped from the factory. Any settings that have
not been saved will be lost, including any rules that
you have created. If you want to save the current router
coniguration settings, use the Save button above.
Reboot Device: Click to reboot the router.
Clear Language If you previously installed a language pack and want to
Pack: revert all the menus on the Router interface back to the
default language settings, click the Clear button.
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Firmware
Use the Firmware window to upgrade the irmware of the Router and install language packs. If you plan to install new irmware, make
sure the irmware you want to use is on the local hard drive of the computer. If you want to install a new language pack, make sure that
you have the language pack available. Please check the D-Link support site for irmware updates at http://support.dlink.com. You can
download irmware upgrades to your hard drive from the D-Link support site.
Firmware This section displays information about the irmware
Information: that is loaded on the Router. Click the Check Now
button to ind out if there is an updated irmware; if so,
download the new irmware to your hard drive.
Firmware After you have downloaded the new irmware, click
Upgrade: Browse to locate the irmware update on your hard
drive. Click Upload to complete the irmware upgrade.
Language Pack If you want to change the Router’s language pack, click
Upgrade: Browse to locate the language pack. Click Upload to
complete the load the new language pack.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Dynamic DNS
The DDNS feature allows you to host a server (Web, FTP, Game Server, etc…) using a domain name that you have purchased
(www.whateveryournameis.com) with your dynamically assigned IP address. Most broadband Internet Service Providers assign
dynamic (changing) IP addresses. Using a DDNS service provider, your friends can enter in your domain name to connect to
your server no matter what your IP address is.
Enable Dynamic Domain Name System is a method of keeping
Dynamic DNS: a domain name linked to a changing IP Address. Check
the box to enable DDNS.
Server Select your DDNS provider from the drop-down menu
Address: or enter the DDNS server address.
Host Name: Enter the Host Name that you registered with your DDNS
service provider.
Username or Enter the Username or key for your DDNS account.
Key:
Password or Enter the Password or key for your DDNS account.
Key:
Timeout: Enter a timeout time (in hours).
Status: Displays the current connection status.
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System Check
Ping Test: The Ping Test is used to send Ping packets to test if a
computer is on the Internet. Enter the IP address that you
wish to Ping and click Ping.
IPv6 Ping Test: Enter the IPv6 address that you wish to Ping and click Ping.
Ping Results: The results of your ping attempts will be displayed here.
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Schedules
Schedules can be created for use with enforcing rules. For example, if you want to restrict web access to Mon-Fri from 3pm to
8pm, you could create a schedule selecting Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, and Fri and enter a Start Time of 3pm and End Time of 8pm.
Name: Enter a name for your new schedule.
Days: Select a day, a range of days, or All Week to include
every day.
Time format: Check All Day - 24hrs or enter a start and end
time for your schedule.
Save: You must click Save Settings at the top for your
schedules to go into efect.
Schedule Rules The list of schedules will be listed here. Click the
List: Edit icon to make changes or click the Delete icon
to remove the schedule.
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Status
Device Info
This page displays the current information for the DIR-505. It will display the LAN, WAN (Internet), and Wireless information. If
your Internet connection is set up for a Dynamic IP address then a Release button and a Renew button will be displayed. Use
Release to disconnect from your ISP and use Renew to connect to your ISP.
If your Internet connection is set up for PPPoE, a Connect button and a Disconnect button will be displayed. Use Disconnect
to drop the PPPoE connection and use Connect to establish the PPPoE connection.
General: Displays the router’s time and irmware version.
WAN: Displays the MAC address and the public IP settings for
the router.
LAN: Displays the MAC address and the private (local) IP settings
for the router.
Wireless LAN: Displays the wireless MAC address and your wireless
settings such as SSID and Channel.
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Logs
The Broadband Router keeps a running log of events and activities occurring on the Router. You may send these logs to a
SysLog server on your network.
Log Type: Use the radio buttons to select the types of messages
that you want to display from the log. System, Firewall
& Security, and Router Status messages can be selected.
Log Level: There are three levels of message importance: Critical,
Warning, and Information. Select the levels that you
want displayed in the log.
Log Files: Use this section to view and manage the Router’s log
entries.
First Page: Click this button to view the irst page of the Router logs.
Last Page: Click this button to view the last page of the Router logs.
Previous: Click this button to view the previous page of the Router
logs.
Next: Click this button to view the next page of the Router logs.
Clear: Clears all of the log contents.
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Statistics
The screen below displays the Traic Statistics. Here you can view the amount of packets that pass through the DIR-505 on both
the WAN, LAN ports and both the 802.11n/g (2.4GHz) and 802.11n/a (5GHz) wireless bands. The traic counter will reset if the
device is rebooted.
Refresh: Click the Refresh button to refresh the Router’s traic
statistics.
Reset: Click the Reset button to reset the Router’s traffic
statistics.
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Internet Sessions
The Internet Sessions page displays full details of active Internet sessions through your router. An Internet session is a
conversation between a program or application on a LAN-side computer and a program or application on a WAN-side computer.
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Wireless
The wireless client table displays a list of current connected wireless clients. This table also displays the connection time and
MAC address of the connected wireless clients.
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Help
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Quick Setup Wizard
Repeater Mode
This Wizard is designed to assist you in coniguring your DIR-505 as an repeater.
To start the Setup Wizard click Next.
Select WPS as the coniguration method only if your wireless
device supports Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS). For Manual setup,
skip to page 67.
Click Next to continue.
Press down the Push Button on the Wireless device you are adding
to your wireless network.
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Select Manual as the configuration method to set up your
network manually.
Click Next to continue.
Please wait while your device scans for available Wi-Fi networks.
Select the network you would like your device to connect to.
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Setup Wizard
Click Launch Wireless Setup Wizard to begin the Setup
Wizard.
To start the Setup Wizard click Next.
Select WPS as the coniguration method only if your wireless
device supports Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS).
Click Next to continue.
Press down the Push Button on the Wireless device you are
adding to your wireless network.
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Select Manual as the coniguration method to set up your
network manually.
Click Next to continue.
Select the network you would like your device to connect
to.
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Manual Coniguration
Wireless Settings
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Repeater Mode
Enable Wireless: Check the box to enable the wireless function. If you do
not want to use wireless, uncheck the box to disable all
the wireless functions. You may also set up a speciic time
range (schedule). Select a schedule from the drop-down
menu or click Add New to create a new schedule.
Wireless Mode: Select Repeater Mode from the drop-down menu.
Wireless When you are browsing for available wireless networks,
Network Name: this is the name that will appear in the list (unless Visibility
Status is set to Invisible, see below). This name is also
referred to as the SSID. For security purposes, it is highly
recommended to change from the default network name.
Channel Width: Select the appropriate channel width between 20MHz or
Auto 20/40MHz from the drop-down menu.
Security Mode: Select WEP or WPA Personal.
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Wireless Security
This section will show you the diferent levels of security you can use to protect your data from intruders. The
DIR-605L ofers the following types of security:
• WPA2 (Wi-Fi Protected Access 2)
• WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access)
• WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy)
• WPA2-PSK (Pre-Shared Key)
• WPA-PSK (Pre-Shared Key)
What is WEP?
WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy. It is based on the IEEE 802.11 standard and uses the RC4 encryption algorithm. WEP
provides security by encrypting data over your wireless network so that it is protected as it is transmitted from one wireless
device to another.
To gain access to a WEP network, you must know the key. The key is a string of characters that you create. When using WEP,
you must determine the level of encryption. The type of encryption determines the key length. 128-bit encryption requires a
longer key than 64-bit encryption. Keys are deined by entering in a string in HEX (hexadecimal - using characters 0-9, A-F) or
ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange – alphanumeric characters) format. ASCII format is provided so
you can enter a string that is easier to remember. The ASCII string is converted to HEX for use over the network. Four keys can
be deined so that you can change keys easily.
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Conigure WEP
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless router
before your wireless network adapters. Please establish wireless
connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless signal may
degrade when enabling encryption due to the added overhead.
1. Log into the web-based coniguration by opening a web browser
and entering the IP address of the router (192.168.0.1).
Click on Wireless Setup on the left side.
2. In the Security Mode section, select WEP from the drop-down
menu.
3. In WEP Key Length, select either 64Bit or 128Bit encryption from
the drop-down menu.
5. Next to WEP Key 1, enter a WEP key that you create. Make sure
you enter this key exactly on all your wireless devices. You may
enter up to four diferent keys either using Hex or ASCII. Hex is
recommended (letters A-F and numbers 0-9 are valid). In ASCII all
numbers and letters are valid.
6. Click Save Settings to save your settings. If you are coniguring the router with a wireless adapter, you will lose connectivity
until you enable WEP on your adapter and enter the same WEP key as you did on the router.
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Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless access point before your wireless network adapters. Please establish
wireless connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless signal may degrade when enabling encryption due to the
added overhead.
1. Log into the web-based configuration by opening a web
browser and entering the IP address of the access point
(192.168.0.50). Click on Setup and then click Wireless Settings
on the left side.
2. Next to Security Mode, select WPA-Personal.
3. Next to Cipher Type, select TKIP, AES, or Auto.
4. Next to Passphrase, enter a key. The key is entered as a
passphrase in ASCII format at both ends of the wireless
connection. The passphrase must be between 8-63 characters.
6. Click Save Settings at the top of the window to save your
settings. If you are coniguring the access point with a wireless
adapter, you will lose connectivity until you enable WPA-PSK
on your adapter and enter the same passphrase as you did on
the access point.
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LAN Settings
This section will allow you to change the local network settings of the access point and to conigure the DHCP settings.
Device Name: Enter the Device Name of the AP. It is recommended to
change the Device Name if there is more than one D-Link
device within the subnet.
LAN Connection Use the drop-down menu to select Dynamic IP (DHCP)
Type: to automatically obtain an IP address on the LAN/private
network.
My IPv6 Select from the drop-down menu the type of IPv6
Connection Type: connection you would like to use.
IP Address: Enter the IP address of the access point. The default IP
address is 192.168.0.50. If you change the IP address, once
you click Apply, you will need to enter the new IP address
in your browser to get back into the coniguration utility.
Subnet Mask: Enter the Subnet Mask assigned by your ISP.
Gateway Enter the Gateway assigned by your ISP.
Address:
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Static IP
Select Static IP Address if all the Internet port’s IP information is provided to you by your ISP. You will need to enter in the IP
address, subnet mask, gateway address, and DNS address(es) provided to you by your ISP. Each IP address entered in the ields
must be in the appropriate IP form, which are four octets separated by a dot (x.x.x.x). The Access point will not accept the IP
address if it is not in this format.
Device Name: Enter the Device Name of the AP. It recommended to
change the Device Name if there is more than one D-Link
device within the subnet. You can enter the device name
of the AP into your web browser to access the instead of
IP address for coniguration. If you are using the device
name to connect, ensure that your PC and your DIR-505
are on the same network.
LAN Connection Select Static IP from the drop-down menu.
Type:
IP Address: Enter the IP address of the access point. The default IP
address is 192.168.0.50. If you change the IP address, once
you click Apply, you will need to enter the new IP address
in your browser to get back into the coniguration utility.
Subnet Mask: Enter the Subnet Mask assigned by your ISP.
Default Gateway: Enter the Gateway assigned by your ISP.
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Advanced
Advanced Wireless
Transmit Power: Sets the transmit power of the antennas.
HT 20/40 Check to enable or disable this feature.
Coexistance:
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Wi-Fi Protected Setup
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) System is a simpliied method for securing your wireless network during the “Initial setup” as well
as the “Add New Device” processes. The Wi-Fi Alliance (WFA) has certiied it across diferent products as well as manufactures.
The process is just as easy, as depressing a button for the Push-Button Method or correctly entering the 8-digit code for the
Pin-Code Method. The time reduction in setup and ease of use are quite beneicial, while the highest wireless Security setting
of WPA2 is automatically used.
Enable: Check this box to enable the function
Lock Wireless Locking the wireless security settings prevents the
Security Settings: settings from being changed by the Wi-Fi Protected
Setup feature of the router. Devices can still be added
to the network using Wi-Fi Protected Setup. However,
the settings of the network will not change once this
option is checked.
Pin Settings: Press the button to generate a new PIN or Reset to
Default.
Current PIN: Shows the current value of the router’s PIN.
Reset PIN to Restore the default PIN of the access point.
Default:
Generate New Create a random number that is a valid PIN. This becomes
PIN: the router’s PIN. You can then copy this PIN to the user
interface of the registrar.
Add Wireless Press the button to start with the wizard to setup the
Station: WPS.
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Maintenance
Admin
This page will allow you to change the Administrator password. The administrator password has read/write access.
Password: Enter a new password for the Administrator Login Name.
The administrator can make changes to the settings.
Conirm Enter the same password that you entered in the
Password: previous textbox in order to conirm its accuracy.
Enable Check to enable this feature.
Graphical
Authentication:
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System
Save to Local Use this option to save the current access point
Hard Drive: coniguration settings to a ile on the hard disk of the
computer you are using. Click the Save button. You will
then see a ile dialog where you can select a location
and ile name for the settings.
Upload from Use this option to load previously saved access point
Local Hard Drive: coniguration settings. Click Browse to ind a previously
saved coniguration ile. Then, click the Upload Settings
button to transfer those settings to the access point.
Restore to This option will restore all coniguration settings back
Factory Default: to the settings that were in efect at the time the access
point was shipped from the factory. Any settings that
have not been saved will be lost, including any rules that
you have created. If you want to save the current access
point coniguration settings, use the Save button above.
Note: Restoring the factory default settings will not reset
the Wi-Fi Protected Status to Not Conigured.
Reboot the Click to reboot the access point.
Device:
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Firmware
You can upgrade the irmware of the access point here. Make sure the irmware you want to use is on the local hard drive of
the computer. Click on Browse to locate the irmware ile to be used for the update. Please check the D-Link support website
for irmware updates at http://support.dlink.com. You can download irmware upgrades to your hard drive from this site.
Firmware Click on Check Now to ind out if there is an updated
Upgrade: irmware; if so, download the new irmware to your
hard drive.
Browse: After you have downloaded the new irmware, click
Browse to locate the irmware update on your hard
drive. Click Upload to complete the irmware upgrade.
Upload: Once you have a irmware update on your computer,
use this option to browse for the ile and then upload
the information into the access point.
Language Pack
You can change the language of the web UI by uploading
available language packs.
Browse: After you have downloaded the new language pack,
click Browse to locate the language pack ile on your
hard drive. Click Upload to complete the language
pack upgrade.
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Time
The Time Coniguration option allows you to conigure, update, and maintain the correct time on the internal system clock.
From this section you can set the time zone that you are in. Daylight Saving can also be conigured to automatically adjust the
time when needed.
Time Zone: Select the Time Zone from the drop-down menu.
Daylight To select Daylight Saving time manually, click the Enable
Saving: Daylight Saving check box. Next use the drop-down
menu to select a Daylight Saving Ofset and then enter a
start date and an end date for daylight saving time.
Enable NTP NTP is short for Network Time Protocol. NTP synchronizes
Server: computer clock times in a network of computers. Check
this box to use a NTP server. This will only connect to a
server on the Internet, not a local server.
NTP Server Enter the NTP server or select one from the drop-down
Used: menu.
Date and Time: To manually input the time, enter the values in these
ields for the Year, Month, Day, Hour, Minute, and Second
and then click Save Settings. You can also click the Copy
Your Computer’s Time Settings button at the bottom
of the screen.
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Status
Device Info
This page displays the current information for the DIR-505. It will display the LAN and wireless LAN information.
General: Displays the access point’s time and firmware
version.
LAN: Displays the MAC address and the private (local) IP
settings for the access point.
Wireless LAN: Displays the wireless MAC address and your
wireless settings such as SSID and Channel.
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Logs
The DIR-505 keeps a running log of events and activities occurring on the AP. If the AP is rebooted, the logs are automatically
cleared. You can save the log iles under Log Setting.
Log Options: There are several types of logs that can be viewed:
System Activity, Debug Information, Attacks,
Dropped Packets and Notice.
First Page: This button directs you to the irst page of the log.
Last Page: This button directs you to the last page of the log.
Previous Page: This button directs you to the previous page of
the log.
Next Page: This button directs you to the next page of the log.
Clear Log: This button clears all current log content.
Log Settings: This button opens a new menu where you can
conigure the log settings.
Refresh: This button refreshes the log.
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Statistics
The DIR-505 keeps statistics of the traic that passes through it. You can view the amount of packets that pass through the
LAN and wireless portions of the network. The traic counter will reset if the access point is rebooted.
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Quick Setup Wizard
WiFi Hot Spot
If this is your irst time using this device, you will be directed
to the Pre-Setup Wizard. If you have already completed the
Pre-Setup Wizard, please continue to page 88.
Enter Admin in the User Name ield. Leave the password blank
by default.
Click Next to continue.
Please wait while your device scans for an available Wi-Fi
Network.
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Select the Network you would like your device to connect
to and click Connect.
Enter the Wi-Fi password and click Next to continue.
Select Use the same Wi-Fi Network name for the extended
Network and click Next.
Your setup is now complete. Click Save to inish.
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To start the Wizard, click Next to continue.
Please wait while your device scans for an available Wi-Fi
Network.
Select the Network you would like your device to connect
to and click Connect.
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Enter the Wi-Fi password and click Next to continue.
Select Use the same Wi-Fi Network name for the extended
Network and click Next.
Your setup is now complete. Click Save to inish.
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Setup
Wi-Fi Hot Spot Setup
Enable Wireless: Check the box to enable the wireless function. If you do
not want to use wireless, uncheck the box to disable all
the wireless functions. You may also set up a speciic time
range (schedule). Select a schedule from the drop-down
menu or click Add New to create a new schedule.
Wireless Mode: Select Wi-Fi Hot Spot Mode from the drop-down menu.
Wireless When you are browsing for available wireless networks,
Network Name: this is the name that will appear in the list (unless
Visibility Status is set to Invisible, see below). This name
is also referred to as the SSID. For security purposes,
it is highly recommended to change from the default
network name.
Channel Width: Select the appropriate channel width between 20MHz
or Auto 20/40MHz from the drop-down menu.
Security Mode: Select WEP or WPA Personal.
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Please Select the Wi-Fi Hotspot you would like to connect to
with your device.
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Conigure WPA/WPA2 Personal
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless access
point before your wireless network adapters. Please establish wireless
connectivity before enabling encryption. Your wireless signal may
degrade when enabling encryption due to the added overhead.
1. Log into the web-based coniguration by opening a web browser
and entering the IP address of the access point (192.168.0.50).
Click on Setup and then click Wireless Settings on the left side.
2. Next to Security Mode, select WPA-Personal.
3. Next to WPA Mode, select Auto (WPA or WPA2).
4. Next to Cipher Type, select TKIP, AES, or Auto.
5. Next to Passphrase, enter a key. The key is entered as a passphrase
in ASCII format at both ends of the wireless connection. The
passphrase must be between 8-63 characters.
7. Click Save Settings at the top of the window to save your settings.
If you are coniguring the access point with a wireless adapter, you
will lose connectivity until you enable WPA-PSK on your adapter and enter the same passphrase as you did on the access
point.
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WAN Settings
This section will allow you to change the local network settings of the access point and to conigure the DHCP settings.
My Internet Use the drop-down menu to select Dynamic IP (DHCP)
Connection is: to automatically obtain an IP address on the LAN/private
network.
Host Name: The Host Name is optional but may be required by some
ISPs. Leave blank if you are
not sure.
MTU: Maximum Transmission Unit - you may need to change
the MTU for optimal performance with your speciic ISP.
1500 is the default MTU.
Mac Address: The default MAC Address is set to the Internet port’s
physical interface MAC address on the Broadband Router.
It is not recommended that you change the default
MAC address unless required by your ISP. You can use
the Clone Your PC’s MAC Address button to replace the
Internet port’s MAC address with the MAC address of your
Ethernet card.
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Wireless Setup
Extended SSID: Use the drop-down menu to select Dynamic IP (DHCP)
to automatically obtain an IP address on the LAN/private
network.
Channel Width: 20MHz - Select if you are not using any 802.11n wireless
clients.
40MHz - Select if you are using 802.11n wireless clients
only.
Security Mode: Select from the drop-down menu the type of security
mode you would like to use.
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Manual Wireless Settings
Extended SSID: Select Remain the same as SSID or Create Extended
SSID.
Channel Width: 20MHz - Select if you are not using any 802.11n wireless
clients.
40MHz - Select if you are using 802.11n wireless clients
only.
Security Mode: Select from the drop-down menu the type of security
mode you would like to use.
WPA Mode: Select Auto, WPA2 Only, or WPA Only. Use Auto if you
have wireless clients using both WPA and WPA2.
Cipher Type: Select TKIP and AES, TKIP, or AES.
Pre-Shared Key: Enter a key (passphrase). The key is entered as a passphrase
in ASCII format at both ends of the wireless connection.
The pass-phrase must be between 8-63 characters.
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LAN Setup
This section will allow you to change the local network settings of the access point and to conigure the DHCP settings.
Device Name: Enter the Device Name of the AP. It is recommended to
change the Device Name if there is more than one D-Link
device within the subnet.
LAN Connection Use the drop-down menu to select Dynamic IP (DHCP)
Type: to automatically obtain an IP address on the LAN/private
network.
IP Address: Enter the IP address of the access point. The default IP
address is 192.168.0.50. If you change the IP address, once
you click Apply, you will need to enter the new IP address
in your browser to get back into the coniguration utility.
Subnet Mask: Enter the Subnet Mask assigned by your ISP.
Gateway Enter the Gateway assigned by your ISP.
Address:
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Advanced
Advanced Wireless
Transmit Power: Sets the transmit power of the antennas.
HT 20/40 Check to enable or disable this feature.
Coexistance:
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Maintance
Admin
This page will allow you to change the Administrator password. The administrator password has read/write access.
Password: Enter a new password for the Administrator Login Name.
The administrator can make changes to the settings.
Conirm Enter the same password that you entered in the
Password: previous textbox in order to conirm its accuracy.
Enable Check to enable this feature.
Graphical
Authentication:
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System
Save to Local Use this option to save the current access point
Hard Drive: coniguration settings to a ile on the hard disk of the
computer you are using. Click the Save button. You will
then see a ile dialog where you can select a location
and ile name for the settings.
Upload from Use this option to load previously saved access point
Local Hard Drive: coniguration settings. Click Browse to ind a previously
saved coniguration ile. Then, click the Upload Settings
button to transfer those settings to the access point.
Restore to This option will restore all coniguration settings back
Factory Default: to the settings that were in efect at the time the access
point was shipped from the factory. Any settings that
have not been saved will be lost, including any rules that
you have created. If you want to save the current access
point coniguration settings, use the Save button above.
Note: Restoring the factory default settings will not reset
the Wi-Fi Protected Status to Not Conigured.
Reboot the Click to reboot the access point.
Device:
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Firmware
You can upgrade the irmware of the access point here. Make sure the irmware you want to use is on the local hard drive of
the computer. Click on Browse to locate the irmware ile to be used for the update. Please check the D-Link support website
for irmware updates at http://support.dlink.com. You can download irmware upgrades to your hard drive from this site.
Firmware Click on Check Now to ind out if there is an updated
Upgrade: irmware; if so, download the new irmware to your
hard drive.
Browse: After you have downloaded the new irmware, click
Browse to locate the irmware update on your hard
drive. Click Upload to complete the irmware upgrade.
Upload: Once you have a irmware update on your computer,
use this option to browse for the ile and then upload
the information into the access point.
Language Pack
You can change the language of the web UI by uploading
available language packs.
After you have downloaded the new language pack,
click Browse to locate the language pack ile on your
hard drive. Click Upload to complete the language
pack upgrade.
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Time
The Time Coniguration option allows you to conigure, update, and maintain the correct time on the internal system clock.
From this section you can set the time zone that you are in. Daylight Saving can also be conigured to automatically adjust the
time when needed.
Time Zone: Select the Time Zone from the drop-down menu.
Daylight To select Daylight Saving time manually, click the Enable
Saving: Daylight Saving check box. Next use the drop-down
menu to select a Daylight Saving Ofset and then enter a
start date and an end date for daylight saving time.
Enable NTP NTP is short for Network Time Protocol. NTP synchronizes
Server: computer clock times in a network of computers. Check
this box to use a NTP server. This will only connect to a
server on the Internet, not a local server.
NTP Server Enter the NTP server or select one from the drop-down
Used: menu.
Date and Time: To manually input the time, enter the values in these
ields for the Year, Month, Day, Hour, Minute, and Second
and then click Save Settings. You can also click the Copy
Your Computer’s Time Settings button at the bottom
of the screen.
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Status
Device Info
This page displays the current information for the DIR-505. It will display the LAN, WAN (Internet), and Wireless information. If
your Internet connection is set up for a Dynamic IP address then a Release button and a Renew button will be displayed. Use
Release to disconnect from your ISP and use Renew to connect to your ISP.
If your Internet connection is set up for PPPoE, a Connect button and a Disconnect button will be displayed. Use Disconnect
to drop the PPPoE connection and use Connect to establish the PPPoE connection.
General: Displays the router’s time and irmware version.
WAN: Displays the MAC address and the public IP settings for
the router.
LAN: Displays the MAC address and the private (local) IP settings
for the router.
Wireless LAN: Displays the wireless MAC address and your wireless
settings such as SSID and Channel.
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Logs
The DIR-505 keeps a running log of events and activities occurring on the AP. If the AP is rebooted, the logs are automatically
cleared. You can save the log iles under Log Setting.
Log Type: Use the radio buttons to select the types of messages
that you want to display from the log. System, Firewall
& Security, and Router Status messages can be selected.
Log Level: There are three levels of message importance: Critical,
Warning, and Information. Select the levels that you
want displayed in the log.
Log Files: Use this section to view and manage the Router’s log
entries.
First Page: Click this button to view the irst page of the Router logs.
Last Page: Click this button to view the last page of the Router logs.
Previous: Click this button to view the previous page of the Router
logs.
Next: Click this button to view the next page of the Router logs.
Clear: Clears all of the log contents.
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Section 3 - Coniguration
Statistics
The DAP-505 keeps statistics of the traic that passes through it. You can view the amount of packets that pass through the
LAN and wireless portions of the network.
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Help
Click the desired hyperlink to get more information about how to use the Router.
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Section 4 - Security
Connect a Wireless Client to your Router
WPS Button
The easiest and most secure way to connect your wireless devices to the router is WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup). Most wireless
devices such as wireless adapters, media players, Blu-ray DVD players, wireless printers and cameras will have a WPS button
(or a software utility with WPS) that you can press to connect to the DIR-505 router. Please refer to your user manual for the
wireless device you want to connect to make sure you understand how to enable WPS. Once you know, follow the steps below:
Step 1 - Press the WPS button on the DIR-505 for about 1
second. The WPS button will start to blink.
Step 2 - Within 2 minutes, press the WPS button on your wireless client (or launch the software utility and start the WPS
process).
Step 3 - Allow up to 1 minute to conigure. Once the WPS light stops blinking, you will be connected and your wireless
connection will be secure with WPA2.
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Section 4 - Security
Windows® 7
WPA/WPA2
It is recommended to enable wireless security (WPA/WPA2) on your wireless router or access point before coniguring your
wireless adapter. If you are joining an existing network, you will need to know the security key or passphrase being used.
1. Click on the wireless icon in your system tray (lower-right corner).
Wireless Icon
2. The utility will display any available wireless networks in your area.
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Section 4 - Security
3. Highlight the wireless network (SSID) you would like to connect to
and click the Connect button.
If you get a good signal but cannot access the Internet, check your
TCP/IP settings for your wireless adapter. Refer to the Networking
Basics section in this manual for more information.
4. The following window appears while your computer tries to
connect to the router.
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Section 4 - Security
5. Enter the same security key or passphrase that is on your router and
click Connect. You can also connect by pushing the WPS button on
the router.
It may take 20-30 seconds to connect to the wireless network. If the
connection fails, please verify that the security settings are correct. The
key or passphrase must be exactly the same as on the wireless router.
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Section 4 - Security
WPS
The WPS feature of the DIR-505 can be conigured using Windows® 7. Carry out the following steps to use Windows® 7 to
conigure the WPS feature:
1. Click the Start button and select Computer from the Start menu.
2. Click Network on the left side.
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Section 4 - Security
3. Double-click the DIR-505.
4. Input the WPS PIN number (displayed in the WPS window on the
Router’s LCD screen or in the Setup > Wireless Setup menu in
the Router’s Web UI) and click Next.
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Section 4 - Security
5. Type a name to identify the network.
6. To conigure advanced settings, click the
icon.
Click Next to continue.
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Section 4 - Security
7. The following window appears while the Router is being
conigured.
Wait for the coniguration to complete.
8. The following window informs you that WPS on the router has
been setup successfully.
Make a note of the security key as you may need to provide this
security key if adding an older wireless device to the network in
the future.
9. Click Close to complete WPS setup.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
Windows Vista®
Windows Vista® users may use the built-in wireless utility. If you are using another company’s utility or Windows® 2000, please
refer to the user manual of your wireless adapter for help with connecting to a wireless network. Most utilities will have a “site
survey” option similar to the Windows Vista® utility as seen below.
If you receive the Wireless Networks Detected bubble, click on the
center of the bubble to access the utility.
or
Right-click on the wireless computer icon in your system tray (lower-right
corner next to the time). Select Connect to a network.
The utility will display any available wireless networks in your area. Click
on a network (displayed using the SSID) and click the Connect button.
If you get a good signal but cannot access the Internet, check you TCP/
IP settings for your wireless adapter. Refer to the Networking Basics
section in this manual for more information.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
WPA/WPA2
It is recommended to enable wireless security (WPA/WPA2) on your wireless router or access point before coniguring your
wireless adapter. If you are joining an existing network, you will need to know the security key or passphrase being used.
1. Open the Windows Vista® Wireless Utility by right-clicking on the
wireless computer icon in your system tray (lower right corner of
screen). Select Connect to a network.
2. Highlight the wireless network (SSID) you would like to connect
to and click Connect.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
3. Enter the same security key or passphrase that is on your router and
click Connect.
It may take 20-30 seconds to connect to the wireless network. If the
connection fails, please verify that the security settings are correct. The
key or passphrase must be exactly the same as on the wireless router.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
WPS/WCN 2.0
The router supports Wi-Fi protection, referred to as WCN 2.0 in Windows Vista®. The following instructions for setting this up
depends on whether you are using Windows Vista® to conigure the router or third party software.
When you irst set up the router, Wi-Fi protection is disabled and unconigured. To enjoy the beneits of Wi-Fi protection, the
router must be both enabled and conigured. There are three basic methods to accomplish this: use Windows Vista’s built-in
support for WCN 2.0, use software provided by a third party, or manually conigure.
If you are running Windows Vista®, log into the router and click the Enable checkbox in the Basic > Wireless section. Use the
Current PIN that is displayed on the Advanced > Wi-Fi Protected Setup section or choose to click the Generate New PIN
button or Reset PIN to Default button.
If you are using third party software to set up Wi-Fi Protection, carefully follow the directions. When you are inished, proceed
to the next section to set up the newly-conigured router.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
Windows® XP
Windows® XP users may use the built-in wireless utility (Zero Coniguration Utility). The following instructions are for Service
Pack 2 users. If you are using another company’s utility, please refer to the user manual of your wireless adapter for help with
connecting to a wireless network. Most utilities will have a “site survey” option similar to the Windows® XP utility as seen below.
If you receive the Wireless Networks Detected bubble, click on the
center of the bubble to access the utility.
or
Right-click on the wireless computer icon in your system tray (lower-right
corner next to the time). Select View Available Wireless Networks.
The utility will display any available wireless networks in your area. Click
on a network (displayed using the SSID) and click the Connect button.
If you get a good signal but cannot access the Internet, check you TCP/
IP settings for your wireless adapter. Refer to the Networking Basics
section in this manual for more information.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
WPA/WPA2
It is recommended to enable WPA on your wireless router or access point before coniguring your wireless adapter. If you are
joining an existing network, you will need to know the WPA key being used.
1. Open the Windows® XP Wireless Utility by right-clicking on the
wireless computer icon in your system tray (lower-right corner
of screen). Select View Available Wireless Networks.
2. Highlight the wireless network (SSID) you would like to
connect to and click Connect.
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Section 5 - Connecting to a Wireless Network
3. The Wireless Network Connection box will appear. Enter the WPA-PSK
passphrase and click Connect.
It may take 20-30 seconds to connect to the wireless network. If the
connection fails, please verify that the WPA-PSK settings are correct. The
WPA-PSK passphrase must be exactly the same as on the wireless router.
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Section 6 - Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting
This chapter provides solutions to problems that can occur during the installation and operation of the DIR-505. Read the
following descriptions if you are having problems. The examples below are illustrated in Windows® XP. If you have a diferent
operating system, the screenshots on your computer will look similar to the following examples.
1. Why can’t I access the web-based coniguration utility?
When entering the IP address of the D-Link router (192.168.0.1 for example), you are not connecting to a website nor do you
have to be connected to the Internet. The device has the utility built-in to a ROM chip in the device itself. Your computer must
be on the same IP subnet to connect to the web-based utility.
• Make sure you have an updated Java-enabled web browser. We recommend the following:
Microsoft Internet Explorer® 6.0 and higher
Mozilla Firefox 3.0 and higher
Google™ Chrome 2.0 and higher
Apple Safari 3.0 and higher
• Verify physical connectivity by checking for solid link lights on the device. If you do not get a solid link light, try using a
diferent cable or connect to a diferent port on the device if possible. If the computer is turned of, the link light may not be
on.
• Disable any Internet security software running on the computer. Software irewalls such as Zone Alarm, Black Ice, Sygate,
Norton Personal Firewall, and Windows® XP irewall may block access to the coniguration pages. Check the help iles included
with your irewall software for more information on disabling or coniguring it.
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Section 6 - Troubleshooting
• Conigure your Internet settings:
• Go to Start > Settings > Control Panel. Double-click the Internet Options Icon. From the Security tab, click
the button to restore the settings to their defaults.
• Click the Connection tab and set the dial-up option to Never Dial a Connection. Click the LAN Settings button.
Make sure nothing is checked. Click OK.
• Go to the Advanced tab and click the button to restore these settings to their defaults. Click OK three times.
• Close your web browser (if open) and open it.
• Access the web management. Open your web browser and enter the IP address of your D-Link router in the address bar. This
should open the login page for your web management.
• If you still cannot access the coniguration, unplug the power to the router for 10 seconds and plug back in. Wait about 30
seconds and try accessing the coniguration. If you have multiple computers, try connecting using a diferent computer.
2. What can I do if I forgot my password?
If you forgot your password, you must reset your router. Unfortunately this process will change all your settings back to the
factory defaults.
To reset the router, locate the reset button (hole) on the rear panel of the unit. With the router powered on, use a paperclip
to hold the button down for 10 seconds. Release the button and the router will go through its reboot process. Wait about 30
seconds to access the router. The default IP address is 192.168.0.1. When logging in, the username is admin and leave the
password box empty.
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Section 6 - Troubleshooting
3. Why can’t I connect to certain sites or send and receive emails when connecting through my router?
If you are having a problem sending or receiving email, or connecting to secure sites such as eBay, banking sites, and Hotmail,
we suggest lowering the MTU in increments of ten (Ex. 1492, 1482, 1472, etc).
To ind the proper MTU Size, you’ll have to do a special ping of the destination you’re trying to go to. A destination could be
another computer, or a URL.
• Click on Start and then click Run.
• Windows® 95, 98, and Me users type in command (Windows® NT, 2000, XP, Vista®, and 7 users type in cmd) and
press Enter (or click OK).
• Once the window opens, you’ll need to do a special ping. Use the following syntax:
ping [url] [-f] [-l] [MTU value]
Example: ping yahoo.com -f -l 1472
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Section 6 - Troubleshooting
You should start at 1472 and work your way down by 10 each time. Once you get a reply, go up by 2 until you get a fragmented
packet. Take that value and add 28 to the value to account for the various TCP/IP headers. For example, lets say that 1452 was the
proper value, the actual MTU size would be 1480, which is the optimum for the network we’re working with (1452+28=1480).
Once you ind your MTU, you can now conigure your router with the proper MTU size.
To change the MTU rate on your router follow the steps below:
• Open your browser, enter the IP address of your router (192.168.0.1) and click OK.
• Enter your username (admin) and password (blank by default). Click OK to enter the web coniguration page
for the device.
• Click on Setup and then click Manual Conigure.
• To change the MTU enter the number in the MTU ield and click Save Settings to save your settings.
• Test your email. If changing the MTU does not resolve the problem, continue changing the MTU in increments
of ten.
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Appendix A - Wireless Basics
Wireless Basics
D-Link wireless products are based on industry standards to provide easy-to-use and compatible high-speed wireless
connectivity within your home, business or public access wireless networks. Strictly adhering to the IEEE standard, the D-Link
wireless family of products will allow you to securely access the data you want, when and where you want it. You will be able
to enjoy the freedom that wireless networking delivers.
A wireless local area network (WLAN) is a cellular computer network that transmits and receives data with radio signals instead of
wires. Wireless LANs are used increasingly in both home and oice environments, and public areas such as airports, cofee shops
and universities. Innovative ways to utilize WLAN technology are helping people to work and communicate more eiciently.
Increased mobility and the absence of cabling and other ixed infrastructure have proven to be beneicial for many users.
Wireless users can use the same applications they use on a wired network. Wireless adapter cards used on laptop and desktop
systems support the same protocols as Ethernet adapter cards.
Under many circumstances, it may be desirable for mobile network devices to link to a conventional Ethernet LAN in order to
use servers, printers or an Internet connection supplied through the wired LAN. A Wireless Router is a device used to provide
this link.
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Appendix A - Wireless Basics
What is Wireless?
Wireless or Wi-Fi technology is another way of connecting your computer to the network without using wires. Wi-Fi uses radio
frequency to connect wirelessly, so you have the freedom to connect computers anywhere in your home or oice network.
Why D-Link Wireless?
D-Link is the worldwide leader and award winning designer, developer, and manufacturer of networking products. D-Link
delivers the performance you need at a price you can aford. D-Link has all the products you need to build your network.
How does wireless work?
Wireless works similar to how cordless phone work, through radio signals to transmit data from one point A to point B. But
wireless technology has restrictions as to how you can access the network. You must be within the wireless network range area
to be able to connect your computer. There are two diferent types of wireless networks Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN),
and Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN).
Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN)
In a wireless local area network, a device called an Access Point (AP) connects computers to the network. The access point has
a small antenna attached to it, which allows it to transmit data back and forth over radio signals. With an indoor access point
as seen in the picture, the signal can travel up to 300 feet. With an outdoor access point the signal can reach out up to 30 miles
to serve places like manufacturing plants, industrial locations, college and high school campuses, airports, golf courses, and
many other outdoor venues.
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Appendix A - Wireless Basics
Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)
Bluetooth is the industry standard wireless technology used for WPAN. Bluetooth devices in WPAN operate in a range up to
30 feet away.
Compared to WLAN the speed and wireless operation range are both less than WLAN, but in return it doesn’t use nearly as
much power which makes it ideal for personal devices, such as mobile phones, PDAs, headphones, laptops, speakers, and other
devices that operate on batteries.
Who uses wireless?
Wireless technology as become so popular in recent years that almost everyone is using it, whether it’s for home, oice, business,
D-Link has a wireless solution for it.
Home
• Gives everyone at home broadband access
• Surf the web, check email, instant message, etc.
• Gets rid of the cables around the house
• Simple and easy to use
Small Oice and Home Oice
• Stay on top of everything at home as you would at oice
• Remotely access your oice network from home
• Share Internet connection and printer with multiple computers
• No need to dedicate oice space
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Appendix A - Wireless Basics
Where is wireless used?
Wireless technology is expanding everywhere not just at home or oice. People like the freedom of mobility and it’s becoming
so popular that more and more public facilities now provide wireless access to attract people. The wireless connection in public
places is usually called “hotspots”.
Using a D-Link Cardbus Adapter with your laptop, you can access the hotspot to connect to Internet from remote locations
like: Airports, Hotels, Cofee Shops, Libraries, Restaurants, and Convention Centers.
Wireless network is easy to setup, but if you’re installing it for the irst time it could be quite a task not knowing where to start.
That’s why we’ve put together a few setup steps and tips to help you through the process of setting up a wireless network.
Tips
Here are a few things to keep in mind, when you install a wireless network.
Centralize your router or Access Point
Make sure you place the router/access point in a centralized location within your network for the best performance. Try to
place the router/access point as high as possible in the room, so the signal gets dispersed throughout your home. If you have
a two-story home, you may need a repeater to boost the signal to extend the range.
Eliminate Interference
Place home appliances such as cordless telephones, microwaves, and televisions as far away as possible from the router/access
point. This would signiicantly reduce any interference that the appliances might cause since they operate on same frequency.
Security
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Appendix A - Wireless Basics
Don’t let you next-door neighbors or intruders connect to your wireless network. Secure your wireless network by turning on
the WPA or WEP security feature on the router. Refer to product manual for detail information on how to set it up.
Wireless Modes
There are basically two modes of networking:
• Infrastructure – All wireless clients will connect to an access point or wireless router.
• Ad-Hoc – Directly connecting to another computer, for peer-to-peer communication, using wireless network
adapters on each computer, such as two or more DIR-505 wireless network Cardbus adapters.
An Infrastructure network contains an Access Point or wireless router. All the wireless devices, or clients, will connect to the
wireless router or access point.
An Ad-Hoc network contains only clients, such as laptops with wireless cardbus adapters. All the adapters must be in Ad-Hoc
mode to communicate.
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Appendix B - Networking Basics
Networking Basics
Check your IP address
After you install your new D-Link adapter, by default, the TCP/IP settings should be set to obtain an IP address from a DHCP
server (i.e. wireless router) automatically. To verify your IP address, please follow the steps below.
Click on Start > Run. In the run box type cmd and click OK. (Windows® 7/Vista® users type cmd in the Start Search box.)
At the prompt, type ipconig and press Enter.
This will display the IP address, subnet mask, and the
default gateway of your adapter.
If the address is 0.0.0.0, check your adapter installation,
security settings, and the settings on your router.
Some irewall software programs may block a DHCP
request on newly installed adapters.
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Appendix B - Networking Basics
Statically Assign an IP address
If you are not using a DHCP capable gateway/router, or you need to assign a static IP address, please follow the steps below:
Step 1
Windows® 7 Click on Start > Control Panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center.
Windows Vista® - Click on Start > Control Panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center > Manage Network
Connections.
Windows® XP Click on Start > Control Panel > Network Connections.
Windows® 2000 - From the desktop, right-click My Network Places > Properties.
Step 2
Right-click on the Local Area Connection which represents your network adapter and select Properties.
Step 3
Highlight Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties.
Step 4
Click Use the following IP address and enter an IP address that is on the same subnet
as your network or the LAN IP address on your router.
Example: If the router´s LAN IP address is 192.168.0.1, make your IP address 192.168.0.X
where X is a number between 2 and 99. Make sure that the number you choose is not
in use on the network. Set the Default Gateway the same as the LAN IP address of your
router (I.E. 192.168.0.1).
Set Primary DNS the same as the LAN IP address of your router (192.168.0.1). The
Secondary DNS is not needed or you may enter a DNS server from your ISP.
Step 5
Click OK twice to save your settings.
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Appendix C - Technical Speciications
Technical Speciications
Standards
• IEEE 802.11n
• IEEE 802.11g
• IEEE 802.3
• IEEE 802.3u
Operating Temperature
• 32°F to 104°F ( 0°C to 40°C)
Humidity
• 95% maximum (non-condensing)
Security
• WPA™ - Personal/Enterprise
• WPA2™ - Personal/Enterprise
Wireless Signal Rates1
IEEE 802.11n 2.4GHz(HT20/40):
• 72.2Mbps (150)
· 65Mbps (135)
• 57.8Mbps (120)
· 43.3Mbps (90)
• 28.9Mbps (60)
· 21.7Mbps (45)
•14.4Mbps (30)
· 7.2Mbps (15)
IEEE 802.11g:
• 54Mbps
• 48Mbps
• 24Mbps
• 18Mbps
• 11Mbps
• 9Mbps
• 5.5Mbps
• 2Mbps
• 36Mbps
• 12Mbps
• 6Mbps
• 1Mbps
Safety & Emissions
• FCC
• CE
• C-Tick
• UL
• IC
Dimensions
• 2.68” x 1.65” x 2”
(68 x 42 x 51mm)
Warranty
• 1 Year
AC Input
• 110~240VAC, 50/60MHz, 0.3A
Frequency Range2 (North America)
• 2.412GHz to 2.462GHz (802.11g/n)
1 Maximum wireless signal rate derived from IEEE Standard 802.11g and 802.11n speciications. Actual data throughput will vary. Network conditions and environmental factors, including volume
of network traic, building materials and construction, and network overhead, lower actual data throughput rate. Environmental factors will adversely afect wireless signal range.
2 Frequency Range varies depending on country’s regulation.
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Appendix D - Contacting Technical Support
Contacting Technical Support
U.S. and Canadian customers can contact D-Link technical support through our web site or by phone.
Before you contact technical support, please have the following ready:
• Model number of the product (e.g. DIR-505)
• Hardware Revision (located on the label on the bottom of the router (e.g. rev C1))
• Serial Number (s/n number located on the label on the bottom of the router).
You can ind software updates and user documentation on the D-Link website as well as frequently asked questions and
answers to technical issues.
For customers within the United States:
For customers within Canada:
Phone Support:
(877) 453-5465
Phone Support:
(800) 361-5265
Internet Support:
http://support.dlink.com
Internet Support:
http://support.dlink.ca
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
GPL Code Statement
This D-Link product includes software code developed by third parties, including software code subject to the GNU General
Public License (“GPL”) or GNU Lesser General Public License (“LGPL”). As applicable, the terms of the GPL and LGPL, and
information on obtaining access to the GPL code and LGPL code used in this product, are available to you at:
http://tsd.dlink.com.tw/GPL.asp
The GPL code and LGPL code used in this product is distributed WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY and is subject to the copyrights
of one or more authors. For details, see the GPL code and the LGPL code for this product and the terms of the GPL and LGPL.
WRITTEN OFFER FOR GPL AND LGPL SOURCE CODE
Where such speciic license terms entitle you to the source code of such software, D-Link will provide upon written request
via email and/or traditional paper mail the applicable GPL and LGPLsource code iles via CD-ROM for a nominal cost to cover
shipping and media charges as allowed under the GPL and LGPL.
Please direct all inquiries to:
Email: GPLCODE@DLink.com
Snail Mail:
Attn: GPLSOURCE REQUEST
D-Link Systems, Inc.
17595 Mt. Herrmann Street
Fountain Valley, CA 92708
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 29 June 2007
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.  Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim
copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
Preamble
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of works.
The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed to take away your freedom to share and change the
works. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change all versions
of a program--to make sure it remains free software for all its users. We, the Free Software Foundation, use the GNU General
Public License for most of our software; it applies also to any other work released this way by its authors. You can apply it to
your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make
sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for them if you wish), that you receive source
code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs, and that you know
you can do these things.
To protect your rights, we need to prevent others from denying you these rights or asking you to surrender the rights. Therefore,
you have certain responsibilities if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it: responsibilities to respect the
freedom of others.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must pass on to the recipients the
same freedoms that you received. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show
them these terms so they know their rights.
Developers that use the GNU GPL protect your rights with two steps:
(1) assert copyright on the software, and (2) ofer you this License giving you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or
modify it.
For the developers’ and authors’ protection, the GPL clearly explains that there is no warranty for this free software. For both
users’ and authors’ sake, the GPL requires that modiied versions be marked as changed, so that their problems will not be
attributed erroneously to authors of previous versions.
Some devices are designed to deny users access to install or run modiied versions of the software inside them, although
the manufacturer can do so. This is fundamentally incompatible with the aim of protecting users’ freedom to change the
software. The systematic pattern of such abuse occurs in the area of products for individuals to use, which is precisely where it
is most unacceptable. Therefore, we have designed this version of the GPL to prohibit the practice for those products. If such
problems arise substantially in other domains, we stand ready to extend this provision to those domains in future versions of
the GPL, as needed to protect the freedom of users.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
Finally, every program is threatened constantly by software patents. States should not allow patents to restrict development
and use of software on general-purpose computers, but in those that do, we wish to avoid the special danger that patents
applied to a free program could make it efectively proprietary. To prevent this, the GPL assures that patents cannot be used
to render the program non-free.
The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modiication follow.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
0. Deinitions.
“This License” refers to version 3 of the GNU General Public License.
“Copyright” also means copyright-like laws that apply to other kinds of works, such as semiconductor masks.
“The Program” refers to any copyrightable work licensed under this License. Each licensee is addressed as “you”. “Licensees”
and “recipients” may be individuals or organizations.
To “modify” a work means to copy from or adapt all or part of the work in a fashion requiring copyright permission, other than
the making of an exact copy. The resulting work is called a “modiied version” of the earlier work or a work “based on” the
earlier work.
A “covered work” means either the unmodiied Program or a work based on the Program.
To “propagate” a work means to do anything with it that, without permission, would make you directly or secondarily liable
for infringement under applicable copyright law, except executing it on a computer or modifying a private copy. Propagation
includes copying, distribution (with or without modiication), making available to the public, and in some countries other
activities as well.
To “convey” a work means any kind of propagation that enables other parties to make or receive copies. Mere interaction with
a user through a computer network, with no transfer of a copy, is not conveying.
An interactive user interface displays “Appropriate Legal Notices” to the extent that it includes a convenient and prominently
visible feature that (1) displays an appropriate copyright notice, and (2) tells the user that there is no warranty for the work
(except to the extent that warranties are provided), that licensees may convey the work under this License, and how to view a
copy of this License. If the interface presents a list of user commands or options, such as a menu, a prominent item in the list
meets this criterion.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
1. Source Code.
The “source code” for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modiications to it. “Object code” means any
non-source form of a work.
A “Standard Interface” means an interface that either is an oicial standard deined by a recognized standards body, or, in the
case of interfaces speciied for a particular programming language, one that is widely used among developers working in that
language.
The “System Libraries” of an executable work include anything, other than the work as a whole, that (a) is included in the
normal form of packaging a Major Component, but which is not part of that Major Component, and (b) serves only to enable
use of the work with that Major Component, or to implement a Standard Interface for which an implementation is available
to the public in source code form. A “Major Component”, in this context, means a major essential component (kernel, window
system, and so on) of the speciic operating system (if any) on which the executable work runs, or a compiler used to produce
the work, or an object code interpreter used to run it.
The “Corresponding Source” for a work in object code form means all the source code needed to generate, install, and (for
an executable work) run the object code and to modify the work, including scripts to control those activities. However, it
does not include the work’s System Libraries, or general-purpose tools or generally available free programs which are used
unmodiied in performing those activities but which are not part of the work. For example, Corresponding Source includes
interface deinition iles associated with source iles for the work, and the source code for shared libraries and dynamically
linked subprograms that the work is speciically designed to require, such as by intimate data communication or control low
between those subprograms and other parts of the work.
The Corresponding Source need not include anything that users can regenerate automatically from other parts of the
Corresponding Source.
The Corresponding Source for a work in source code form is that same work.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
2. Basic Permissions.
All rights granted under this License are granted for the term of copyright on the Program, and are irrevocable provided the
stated conditions are met. This License explicitly airms your unlimited permission to run the unmodiied Program. The
output from running a covered work is covered by this License only if the output, given its content, constitutes a covered
work. This License acknowledges your rights of fair use or other equivalent, as provided by copyright law.
You may make, run and propagate covered works that you do not convey, without conditions so long as your license otherwise remains in force. You may convey covered works to others for the sole purpose of having them make modiications
exclusively for you, or provide you with facilities for running those works, provided that you comply with the terms of this
License in conveying all material for which you do not control copyright. Those thus making or running the covered works
for you must do so exclusively on your behalf, under your direction and control, on terms that prohibit them from making any
copies of your copyrighted material outside their relationship with you.
Conveying under any other circumstances is permitted solely under the conditions stated below. Sublicensing is not allowed;
section 10 makes it unnecessary.
3. Protecting Users’ Legal Rights From Anti-Circumvention Law.
No covered work shall be deemed part of an efective technological measure under any applicable law fulilling obligations
under article 11 of the WIPO copyright treaty adopted on 20 December 1996, or similar laws prohibiting or restricting
circumvention of such measures.
When you convey a covered work, you waive any legal power to forbid circumvention of technological measures to the extent
such circumvention
is efected by exercising rights under this License with respect to the covered work, and you disclaim any intention to limit
operation or modiication of the work as a means of enforcing, against the work’s users, your or third parties’ legal rights to
forbid circumvention of technological measures.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
4. Conveying Verbatim Copies.
You may convey verbatim copies of the Program’s source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously
and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice; keep intact all notices stating that this License and
any non-permissive terms added in accord with section 7 apply to the code; keep intact all notices of the absence of any
warranty; and give all recipients a copy of this License along with the Program.
You may charge any price or no price for each copy that you convey, and you may ofer support or warranty protection for a
fee.
5. Conveying Modiied Source Versions.
You may convey a work based on the Program, or the modiications to produce it from the Program, in the form of source
code under the terms of section 4, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) The work must carry prominent notices stating that you modiied it, and giving a relevant date.
b) The work must carry prominent notices stating that it is released under this License and any conditions added
under section 7. This requirement modiies the requirement in section 4 to “keep intact all notices”.
c) You must license the entire work, as a whole, under this License to anyone who comes into possession of a
copy. This License will therefore apply, along with any applicable section 7 additional terms, to the whole of
the work, and all its parts, regardless of how they are packaged. This License gives no permission to license the
work in any other way, but it does not invalidate such permission if you have separately received it.
d) If the work has interactive user interfaces, each must display Appropriate Legal Notices; however, if the Program
has interactive interfaces that do not display Appropriate Legal Notices, your work need not make them do so.
A compilation of a covered work with other separate and independent works, which are not by their nature extensions of
the covered work, and which are not combined with it such as to form a larger program, in or on a volume of a storage or
distribution medium, is called an “aggregate” if the compilation and its resulting copyright are not used to limit the access or
legal rights of the compilation’s users beyond what the individual works permit. Inclusion of a covered work in an aggregate
does not cause this License to apply to the other parts of the aggregate.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
6. Conveying Non-Source Forms.
You may convey a covered work in object code form under the terms of sections 4 and 5, provided that you also convey the
machine-readable Corresponding Source under the terms of this License, in one of these ways:
a) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product (including a physical distribution medium),
accompanied by the Corresponding Source ixed on a durable physical medium customarily used for software
interchange.
b) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product (including a physical distribution medium),
accompanied by a written ofer, valid for at least three years and valid for as long as you ofer spare parts or
customer support for that product model, to give anyone who possesses the object code either (1) a copy
of the Corresponding Source for all the software in the product that is covered by this License, on a durable
physical medium customarily used for software interchange, for a price no more than your reasonable cost of
physically performing this conveying of source, or (2) access to copy the Corresponding Source from a network
server at no charge.
c) Convey individual copies of the object code with a copy of the written ofer to provide the Corresponding
Source. This alternative is allowed only occasionally and noncommercially, and only if you received the object
code with such an ofer, in accord with subsection 6b.
d) Convey the object code by ofering access from a designated place (gratis or for a charge), and ofer equivalent
access to the Corresponding Source in the same way through the same place at no further charge. You need
not require recipients to copy the Corresponding Source along with the object code. If the place to copy the
object code is a network server, the Corresponding Source may be on a diferent server (operated by you or
a third party) that supports equivalent copying facilities, provided you maintain clear directions next to the
object code saying where to ind the Corresponding Source. Regardless of what server hosts the Corresponding
Source, you remain obligated to ensure that it is available for as long as needed to satisfy these requirements.
e) Convey the object code using peer-to-peer transmission, provided you inform other peers where the object
code and Corresponding Source of the work are being ofered to the general public at no charge under
subsection 6d.
A separable portion of the object code, whose source code is excluded from the Corresponding Source as a System
Library, need not be included in conveying the object code work.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
A “User Product” is either (1) a “consumer product”, which means any tangible personal property which is normally used for
personal, family, or household purposes, or (2) anything designed or sold for incorporation into a dwelling. In determining
whether a product is a consumer product, doubtful cases shall be resolved in favor of coverage. For a particular product
received by a particular user, “normally used” refers to a typical or common use of that class of product, regardless of the status
of the particular user or of the way in which the particular user actually uses, or expects or is expected to use, the product. A
product is a consumer product regardless of whether the product has substantial commercial, industrial or non-consumer
uses, unless such uses represent the only signiicant mode of use of the product.
“Installation Information” for a User Product means any methods, procedures, authorization keys, or other information required
to install and execute modiied versions of a covered work in that User Product from a modiied version of its Corresponding
Source. The information must suice to ensure that the continued functioning of the modiied object code is in no case
prevented or interfered with solely because modiication has been made.
If you convey an object code work under this section in, or with, or speciically for use in, a User Product, and the conveying
occurs as part of a transaction in which the right of possession and use of the User Product is transferred to the recipient in
perpetuity or for a ixed term (regardless of how the transaction is characterized), the Corresponding Source conveyed under
this section must be accompanied by the Installation Information. But this requirement does not apply if neither you nor any
third party retains the ability to install modiied object code on the User Product (for example, the work has been installed in
ROM).
The requirement to provide Installation Information does not include a requirement to continue to provide support service,
warranty, or updates for a work that has been modiied or installed by the recipient, or for the User Product in which it has
been modiied or installed. Access to a network may be denied when the modiication itself materially and adversely afects
the operation of the network or violates the rules and protocols for communication across the network.
Corresponding Source conveyed, and Installation Information provided, in accord with this section must be in a format that is
publicly documented (and with an implementation available to the public in source code form), and must require no special
password or key for unpacking, reading or copying.
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7. Additional Terms.
“Additional permissions” are terms that supplement the terms of this License by making exceptions from one or more of its
conditions. Additional permissions that are applicable to the entire Program shall be treated as though they were included in
this License, to the extent that they are valid under applicable law. If additional permissions apply only to part of the Program,
that part may be used separately under those permissions, but the entire Program remains governed by this License without
regard to the additional permissions.
When you convey a copy of a covered work, you may at your option remove any additional permissions from that copy, or
from any part of it. (Additional permissions may be written to require their own removal in certain cases when you modify
the work). You may place additional permissions on material, added by you to a covered work, for which you have or can give
appropriate copyright permission.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, for material you add to a covered work, you may (if authorized by the
copyright holders of that material) supplement the terms of this License with terms:
a) Disclaiming warranty or limiting liability diferently from the terms of sections 15 and 16 of this License; or
b) Requiring preservation of speciied reasonable legal notices or author attributions in that material or in the
Appropriate Legal Notices displayed by works containing it; or
c) Prohibiting misrepresentation of the origin of that material, or requiring that modiied versions of such material
be marked in reasonable ways as diferent from the original version; or
d) Limiting the use for publicity purposes of names of licensors or authors of the material; or
e) Declining to grant rights under trademark law for use of some trade names, trademarks, or service marks; or
f ) Requiring indemniication of licensors and authors of that material by anyone who conveys the material (or
modiied versions of it) with contractual assumptions of liability to the recipient, for any liability that these
contractual assumptions directly impose on those licensors and authors.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
All other non-permissive additional terms are considered “further restrictions” within the meaning of section 10. If the Program
as you received it, or any part of it, contains a notice stating that it is governed by this License along with a term that is a
further restriction, you may remove that term. If a license document contains a further restriction but permits relicensing
or conveying under this License, you may add to a covered work material governed by the terms of that license document,
provided that the further restriction does not survive such relicensing or conveying.
If you add terms to a covered work in accord with this section, you must place, in the relevant source iles, a statement of the
additional terms that apply to those iles, or a notice indicating where to ind the applicable terms.
Additional terms, permissive or non-permissive, may be stated in the form of a separately written license, or stated as
exceptions; the above requirements apply either way.
8. Termination.
You may not propagate or modify a covered work except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to
propagate or modify it is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License (including any patent licenses
granted under the third paragraph of section 11).
However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a)
provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and inally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the
copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notiies you of the
violation by some reasonable means, this is the irst time you have received notice of violation of this License (for any work)
from that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days after your receipt of the notice.
Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
from you under this License. If your rights have been terminated and not permanently reinstated, you do not qualify to
receive new licenses for the same material under section 10.
9. Acceptance Not Required for Having Copies.
You are not required to accept this License in order to receive or run a copy of the Program. Ancillary propagation of a
covered work occurring solely as a consequence of using peer-to-peer transmission to receive a copy likewise does not
require acceptance. However, nothing other than this License grants you permission to propagate or modify any covered
work. These actions infringe copyright if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or propagating a covered
work, you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so.
10. Automatic Licensing of Downstream Recipients.
Each time you convey a covered work, the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensors, to run, modify
and propagate that work, subject to this License. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties with this
License.
An “entity transaction” is a transaction transferring control of an organization, or substantially all assets of one, or subdividing
an organization, or merging organizations. If propagation of a covered work results from an entity transaction, each party
to that transaction who receives a copy of the work also receives whatever licenses to the work the party’s predecessor in
interest had or could give under the previous paragraph, plus a right to possession of the Corresponding Source of the work
from the predecessor in interest, if the predecessor has it or can get it with reasonable eforts.
You may not impose any further restrictions on the exercise of the rights granted or airmed under this License. For example,
you may not impose a license fee, royalty, or other charge for exercise of rights granted under this License, and you may not
initiate litigation (including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that any patent claim is infringed by making,
using, selling, ofering for sale, or importing the Program or any portion of it.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
11. Patents.
A “contributor” is a copyright holder who authorizes use under this License of the Program or a work on which the Program is
based. The work thus licensed is called the contributor’s “contributor version”.
A contributor’s “essential patent claims” are all patent claims owned or controlled by the contributor, whether already acquired
or hereafter acquired, that would be infringed by some manner, permitted by this License, of making, using, or selling its
contributor version, but do not include claims that would be infringed only as a consequence of further modiication of
the contributor version. For purposes of this deinition, “control” includes the right to grant patent sublicenses in a manner
consistent with the requirements of this License.
Each contributor grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license under the contributor’s essential patent
claims, to make, use, sell, ofer for sale, import and otherwise run, modify and propagate the contents of its contributor version.
In the following three paragraphs, a “patent license” is any express agreement or commitment, however denominated, not
to enforce a patent (such as an express permission to practice a patent or covenant not to sue for patent infringement). To
“grant” such a patent license to a party means to make such an agreement or commitment not to enforce a patent against the
party.
If you convey a covered work, knowingly relying on a patent license, and the Corresponding Source of the work is not available
for anyone to copy, free of charge and under the terms of this License, through a publicly available network server or other
readily accessible means, then you must either (1) cause the Corresponding Source to be so available, or (2) arrange to deprive
yourself of the beneit of the patent license for this particular work, or (3) arrange, in a manner consistent with the requirements
of this License, to extend the patent license to downstream recipients. “Knowingly relying” means you have actual knowledge
that, but for the patent license, your conveying the covered work in a country, or your recipient’s use of the covered work in a
country, would infringe one or more identiiable patents in that country that you have reason to believe are valid.
If, pursuant to or in connection with a single transaction or arrangement, you convey, or propagate by procuring conveyance
of, a covered work, and grant a patent license to some of the parties receiving the covered work authorizing them to use,
propagate, modify or convey a speciic copy of the covered work, then the patent license you grant is automatically extended
to all recipients of the covered work and works based on it.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
A patent license is “discriminatory” if it does not include within the scope of its coverage, prohibits the exercise of, or is
conditioned on the non-exercise of one or more of the rights that are speciically granted under this License. You may not
convey a covered work if you are a party to an arrangement with a third party that is in the business of distributing software,
under which you make payment to the third party based on the extent of your activity of conveying the work, and under which
the third party grants, to any of the parties who would receive the covered work from you, a discriminatory patent license (a)
in connection with copies of the covered work conveyed by you (or copies made from those copies), or (b) primarily for and in
connection with speciic products or compilations that contain the covered work, unless you entered into that arrangement,
or that patent license was granted, prior to 28 March 2007.
Nothing in this License shall be construed as excluding or limiting any implied license or other defenses to infringement that
may otherwise be available to you under applicable patent law.
12. No Surrender of Others’ Freedom.
If conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this
License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot convey a covered work so as to satisfy
simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not
convey it at all. For example, if you agree to terms that obligate you to collect a royalty for further conveying from those to
whom you convey the Program, the only way you could satisfy both those terms and this License would be to refrain entirely
from conveying the Program.
13. Use with the GNU Afero General Public License.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, you have permission to link or combine any covered work with a work
licensed under version 3 of the GNU Afero General Public License into a single combined work, and to convey the resulting
work. The terms of this License will continue to apply to the part which is the covered work, but the special requirements of
the GNU Afero General Public License, section 13, concerning interaction through a network will apply to the combination
as such.
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Appendix E - GNU General Public License
14. Revised Versions of this License.
The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the GNU General Public License from time to time.
Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may difer in detail to address new problems or concerns.
Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program speciies that a certain numbered version of the GNU
General Public License “or any later version” applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of
that numbered version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify
a version number of the GNU General Public License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
Foundation. If the Program speciies that a proxy can decide which future versions of the GNU General Public License can
be used, that proxy’s public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the
Program.
Later license versions may give you additional or diferent permissions. However, no additional obligations are imposed on
any author or copyright holder as a result of your choosing to follow a later version.
15. Disclaimer of Warranty.
THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE
STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM“AS IS”WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS
WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR
CORRECTION.
16. Limitation of Liability.
IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY
OTHER PARTY WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO
USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES
SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF
SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
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17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided above cannot be given local legal efect according to their
terms, reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection
with the Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a copy of the Program in return for a fee.
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Appendix F - Warranty
Warranty
Subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein, D-Link Systems, Inc. (“D-Link”) provides this Limited Warranty:
• Only to the person or entity that originally purchased the product from D-Link or its authorized reseller or distributor, and
• Only for products purchased and delivered within the ifty states of the United States, the District of Columbia, U.S. Possessions
or Protectorates, U.S. Military Installations, or addresses with an APO or FPO.
Limited Warranty:
D-Link warrants that the hardware portion of the D-Link product described below (“Hardware”) will be free from material defects in workmanship
and materials under normal use from the date of original retail purchase of the product, for the period set forth below (“Warranty Period”), except
as otherwise stated herein.
• Hardware (excluding power supplies and fans): One (1) year
• Power supplies and fans: One (1) year
• Spare parts and spare kits: Ninety (90) days
The customer’s sole and exclusive remedy and the entire liability of D-Link and its suppliers under this Limited Warranty will be, at
D-Link’s option, to repair or replace the defective Hardware during the Warranty Period at no charge to the original owner or to refund the actual
purchase price paid. Any repair or replacement will be rendered by D-Link at an Authorized D-Link Service Oice. The replacement hardware
need not be new or have an identical make, model or part. D-Link may, at its option, 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 or ninety (90) days, whichever is longer,
and is subject to the same limitations and exclusions. If a material defect is incapable of correction, or if D-Link determines that it is not practical
to repair or replace the defective Hardware, the actual price paid by the original purchaser 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.
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Appendix F - Warranty
Limited Software Warranty:
D-Link warrants that the software portion of the product (“Software”) will substantially conform to D-Link’s then current functional speciications
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 (“Software 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 Software Warranty Period, the magnetic media on which D-Link delivers the Software will be
free of physical defects. The customer’s sole and exclusive remedy and the entire liability of D-Link and its suppliers under this Limited Warranty will
be, at D-Link’s option, to replace the non-conforming Software (or defective media) with software that substantially conforms to D-Link’s functional
speciications for the Software or to refund the portion of the actual purchase price paid that is attributable to the Software. 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. Replacement Software will be warranted for the remainder of the original Warranty Period and is subject
to the same limitations and exclusions. 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 irst 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 portions of D-Link’s products will not be applied to and does not cover any
refurbished product and any product 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 (USA):
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 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 suicient detail to allow DLink to conirm the same, along with proof of purchase of the product (such as a
copy of the dated purchase invoice for the product) if the product is not registered.
• The customer must obtain a Case ID Number from D-Link Technical Support at 1-877-453-5465, who will attempt to assist the
customer in resolving any suspected defects with the product. If the product is considered defective, the customer must obtain a
Return Material Authorization (“RMA”) number by completing the RMA form and entering the assigned Case ID Number at https://
rma.dlink.com/.
• After an RMA number is issued, the defective product must be packaged securely in the original or other suitable shipping package
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Appendix F - Warranty
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., 17595 Mt. Herrmann, Fountain Valley, CA 92708. 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. Return shipping charges shall be prepaid by D-Link if you use an address in the United States, otherwise
we will ship the product to you freight collect. Expedited shipping is available upon request and provided shipping charges are
prepaid by the customer. 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.
Submitting A Claim (Canada):
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 customer shall submit a claim to D-Link as outlined below:
• Customers need to provide their receipt (proof of purchase) even if the product is registered. Without a receipt, no warranty service will
be done. The registration is not considered a proof of purchase.
• The customer must submit with the product as part of the claim a written description of the Hardware defect or Software nonconformance
in suicient detail to allow D-Link to conirm the same, along with proof of purchase of the product (such as a copy of the dated purchase
invoice for the product) if the product is not registered.
• The customer must obtain a Case ID Number from D-Link Technical Support at 1-800-361-5265, who will attempt to assist the customer
in resolving any suspected defects with the product. If the product is considered defective, the customer must obtain a Return Material
Authorization (“RMA”) number by completing the RMA form and entering the assigned Case ID Number at https://rma.dlink.ca/.
• 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
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be rejected by D-Link. Products shall be fully insured by the customer and shipped to D-Link Networks, Inc., 2525 Meadowvale Boulevard
Mississauga, Ontario, L5N 5S2 Canada. 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 Purolator Canada or any common carrier selected by D-Link. Return shipping
charges shall be prepaid by D-Link if you use an address in Canada, otherwise we will ship the product to you freight collect. Expedited
shipping is available upon request and provided shipping charges are prepaid by the customer. 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.
• RMA phone number: 1-800-361-5265 Hours of Operation: Monday-Friday, 9:00AM – 9:00PM EST
What Is Not Covered:
The Limited Warranty provided herein by D-Link does not cover:
Products that, in D-Link’s judgment, have been subjected to abuse, accident, alteration, modiication, tampering, negligence, 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, irmware or other products or services provided by anyone
other than D-Link; and 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.
While necessary maintenance or repairs on your Product can be performed by any company, we recommend that you use only an Authorized D-Link
Service Oice. Improper or incorrectly performed maintenance or repair voids this Limited Warranty.
Disclaimer of Other Warranties:
EXCEPT FOR THE LIMITED WARRANTY SPECIFIED HEREIN, THE PRODUCT IS PROVIDED “AS-IS” WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER
INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IF ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY CANNOT BE DISCLAIMED IN ANY TERRITORY WHERE A PRODUCT IS SOLD, THE DURATION OF SUCH IMPLIED WARRANTY
SHALL BE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THE APPLICABLE WARRANTY PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE. EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY COVERED UNDER THE
LIMITED WARRANTY PROVIDED HEREIN, THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY, SELECTION AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT IS WITH THE
PURCHASER OF THE PRODUCT.
Limitation of Liability:
TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, D-LINK IS NOT LIABLE UNDER ANY CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY OR OTHER LEGAL
OR EQUITABLE THEORY FOR ANY LOSS OF USE OF THE PRODUCT, INCONVENIENCE OR DAMAGES OF ANY CHARACTER, WHETHER DIRECT, SPECIAL,
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Appendix F - Warranty
INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF GOODWILL, 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 CONNECTED WITH, LOSS OF INFORMATION OR DATA CONTAINED IN, STORED ON, OR INTEGRATED WITH ANY PRODUCT RETURNED TO D-LINK
FOR WARRANTY SERVICE) RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THE PRODUCT, RELATING TO WARRANTY SERVICE, OR ARISING OUT OF ANY BREACH OF
THIS LIMITED WARRANTY, EVEN IF D-LINK HAS 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 NONCONFORMING PRODUCT. THE MAXIMUM
LIABILITY OF D-LINK UNDER THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE PURCHASE PRICE OF THE PRODUCT COVERED BY THE 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 speciic legal rights and you may also have other rights which vary from state to state.
Trademarks:
D-Link is a registered trademark of D-Link Corporation/D-Link Systems, Inc. Other trademarks or registered trademarks are the property of their
respective 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 and any amendments thereto. Contents are subject to change without prior notice.
Copyright ©2012 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.
Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement:
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.
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
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153
Appendix F - Warranty
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
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 of and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by
one 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 diferent from that
to which the receiver is connected.
• Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
FCC Caution:
Any changes or modiications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate this
equipment.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.
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 minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body.
Note:
The country code selection is for non-US model only and is not available to all US model. Per FCC regulation, all WiFi product marketed in US must
ixed to US operation channels only.
Industry Canada statement:
This device complies with RSS-210 of the Industry Canada 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.
Ce dispositif est conforme à la norme CNR-210 d’Industrie Canada applicable aux appareils radio exempts de licence. Son fonctionnement est sujet
aux deux conditions suivantes: (1) le dispositif ne doit pas produire de brouillage préjudiciable, et (2) ce dispositif doit accepter tout brouillage reçu,
y compris un brouillage susceptible de provoquer un fonctionnement indésirable.
Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and
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154
Appendix F - Warranty
operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body.
Déclaration d’exposition aux radiations:
Cet équipement est conforme aux limites d’exposition aux rayonnements IC établies pour un environnement non contrôlé. Cet équipement doit
être installé et utilisé avec un minimum de 20 cm de distance entre la source de rayonnement et votre corps.
ICC Notice:
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.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
IC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. End users must follow the speciic operating
instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance 20cm between the
radiator & your body.
Règlement d’Industry Canada
Les conditions de fonctionnement sont sujettes à deux conditions:
(1) Ce périphérique ne doit pas causer d’interférence et.
(2) Ce périphérique doit accepter toute interférence, y compris les interférences pouvant perturber le bon fonctionnement de
ce périphérique.
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155
Appendix G - Registration
Registration
Product registration is entirely voluntary and failure to complete or return this form will not diminish your warranty rights.
Version 1.0
January 11, 2012
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156

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History When                    : 2010:05:12 16:00:16-07:00, 2010:05:12 16:00:17-07:00, 2010:05:12 16:06:32-07:00, 2010:05:12 16:10:47-07:00, 2010:05:12 16:10:48-07:00, 2010:05:12 16:22:36-07:00, 2010:06:01 13:41:52-07:00, 2010:06:01 14:52:48-07:00, 2010:06:01 14:53:21-07:00, 2010:06:01 14:55:48-07:00, 2010:06:01 15:00:11-07:00, 2010:06:01 15:12:40-07:00, 2010:06:01 15:22:02-07:00, 2010:06:01 15:45:43-07:00, 2010:06:01 15:47:41-07:00, 2010:06:01 16:25:47-07:00, 2010:06:01 16:28:06-07:00, 2010:06:09 13:46:21-07:00, 2010:06:09 13:47:53-07:00, 2010:06:09 13:50:42-07:00, 2010:06:09 13:54:02-07:00, 2010:06:09 13:54:03-07:00, 2010:10:26 16:23:42-07:00, 2010:10:26 16:50:46-07:00, 2010:10:26 16:51:29-07:00, 2010:10:26 16:54:51-07:00, 2011:07:22 10:37:04-07:00, 2011:07:22 10:37:06-07:00, 2011:07:22 11:51:25-07:00, 2011:07:22 15:11:04-07:00, 2011:07:25 16:44:57-07:00, 2011:07:26 18:05:49-07:00, 2011:08:04 18:15:51-07:00, 2011:08:05 13:18:02-07:00, 2011:08:08 18:21:52-07:00, 2011:08:09 17:58:13-07:00, 2011:08:10 12:01:16-07:00, 2011:08:10 13:56:57-07:00, 2011:08:10 17:52:21-07:00, 2011:08:11 10:28:52-07:00, 2011:08:11 11:25:40-07:00, 2011:08:11 11:31:49-07:00, 2011:08:11 14:30:07-07:00, 2011:08:11 14:36:40-07:00, 2011:08:11 14:59:22-07:00, 2011:08:11 16:53:05-07:00, 2011:08:11 17:02:15-07:00, 2011:08:12 11:11:28-07:00, 2011:08:12 11:18:20-07:00, 2011:08:15 17:59:39-07:00, 2011:08:16 12:44:20-07:00, 2011:08:16 14:07:48-07:00, 2011:08:16 14:13:13-07:00, 2011:08:19 16:38:15-07:00, 2011:08:22 13:16:53-07:00, 2011:08:22 14:28:04-07:00, 2011:08:22 18:05:33-07:00, 2011:08:23 11:23:25-07:00, 2011:08:23 11:25:12-07:00, 2011:09:13 17:39:16-07:00, 2011:09:13 18:10:47-07:00, 2011:09:14 17:18:32-07:00, 2011:09:15 17:24:14-07:00, 2011:09:15 18:15:48-07:00, 2011:09:15 18:16:39-07:00, 2011:09:16 10:21:51-07:00, 2011:09:16 10:25:59-07:00, 2011:09:16 10:33:56-07:00, 2011:09:16 10:33:57-07:00, 2011:09:16 14:10:24-07:00, 2011:09:16 15:38:34-07:00, 2011:09:16 16:32:32-07:00, 2011:09:16 17:00:31-07:00, 2011:09:16 17:04:01-07:00, 2011:09:16 17:14:27-07:00, 2011:09:16 17:27:04-07:00, 2011:09:19 14:12:25-07:00, 2011:09:19 14:15:35-07:00, 2011:09:19 14:28:35-07:00, 2011:09:19 14:46:27-07:00, 2011:09:21 10:56:06-07:00, 2011:09:21 11:31:56-07:00, 2011:09:21 11:40:32-07:00, 2011:09:21 11:59:20-07:00, 2011:09:21 12:41:32-07:00, 2011:09:21 12:54:46-07:00, 2011:09:21 12:57:14-07:00, 2011:09:21 12:58:40-07:00, 2011:09:21 13:07:14-07:00, 2011:09:21 13:07:15-07:00, 2011:09:21 15:37:25-07:00, 2011:09:21 16:53:34-07:00, 2011:09:21 18:09:35-07:00, 2011:09:21 18:15:45-07:00, 2011:09:21 18:15:46-07:00, 2011:09:21 18:28:06-07:00, 2011:09:22 15:24:26+08:00, 2011:09:22 15:25:50+08:00, 2011:09:23 11:24:26-07:00, 2011:09:23 11:24:26-07:00, 2011:09:23 11:31-07:00, 2011:09:23 11:33:16-07:00, 2011:09:23 11:35:08-07:00, 2011:09:23 11:40:15-07:00, 2011:10:12 10:49:17-07:00, 2011:10:12 10:54:38-07:00, 2011:10:12 10:58:54-07:00, 2011:10:12 11:00:59-07:00, 2011:10:13 15:03:40-07:00, 2011:10:13 16:09:33-07:00, 2011:10:13 18:00:02-07:00, 2011:10:20 13:52:47-07:00, 2011:10:20 13:58:40-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:01:24-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:06:32-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:07:20-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:08:39-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:13-07:00, 2011:10:20 14:17:31-07:00, 2011:10:27 07:55:09-07:00, 2011:10:27 08:04:06-07:00, 2011:10:27 08:04:07-07:00, 2011:10:27 08:10:31-07:00, 2011:10:27 08:26:03-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:10:13-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:12:16-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:12:27-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:34:43-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:48:14-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:52:02-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:53:06-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:54:03-07:00, 2011:10:27 10:56:59-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:26-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:37:50-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:44:48-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:50:57-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:52:25-07:00, 2011:10:27 11:57:29-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:01:58-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:02:51-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:04:03-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:05:01-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:15:46-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:17:18-07:00, 2011:10:27 12:18:56-07:00, 2011:10:27 13:58:30-07:00, 2011:10:27 13:59:50-07:00, 2011:10:27 16:32:19-07:00, 2011:11:03 08:18:58-07:00, 2011:11:03 10:14:09-07:00, 2011:11:03 11:19:15-07:00, 2011:11:03 14:16:55-07:00, 2011:11:03 14:25:50-07:00, 2011:11:03 14:28:11-07:00, 2011:11:03 14:32:50-07:00, 2011:11:09 09:37:08-08:00, 2011:11:09 09:40:04-08:00, 2011:11:09 09:49:01-08:00, 2011:11:09 10:07:49-08:00, 2011:11:09 10:14:32-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:05:48-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:09:40-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:21:27-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:31:03-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:34:16-08:00, 2011:11:09 11:44:33-08:00, 2011:11:09 13:19:57-08:00, 2011:11:09 13:23:08-08:00, 2011:11:09 13:30:09-08:00, 2011:11:09 13:51:48-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:19:46-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:38:05-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:41:22-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:43:15-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:48:59-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:50:46-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:52:40-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:52:57-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:55:49-08:00, 2011:11:16 15:58:28-08:00, 2011:11:17 08:44:26-08:00, 2011:11:17 09:09:44-08:00, 2011:11:17 09:10:36-08:00, 2011:11:17 09:22:45-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:09:03-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:35:43-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:41:04-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:47:39-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:49-08:00, 2011:11:17 10:58:02-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:01-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:09:56-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:16:27-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:22:11-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:22:45-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:26:27-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:30:06-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:36:24-08:00, 2011:11:17 11:38:43-08:00, 2011:11:17 13:41:26-08:00, 2011:11:17 13:50:52-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:18:39-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:20:01-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:21:35-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:46:56-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:47:05-08:00, 2011:11:17 14:59:11-08:00, 2011:11:17 15:01:28-08:00, 2011:11:17 15:42:21-08:00, 2011:11:17 16:17:17-08:00, 2011:11:17 16:19:45-08:00, 2011:11:17 16:24:11-08:00, 2011:11:17 16:26:56-08:00, 2011:11:18 08:02:17-08:00, 2011:11:18 08:10:16-08:00, 2011:11:18 09:09:28-08:00, 2011:11:18 09:10:11-08:00, 2011:11:18 09:30:01-08:00, 2011:11:18 09:31:37-08:00, 2011:11:18 10:10:16-08:00, 2011:11:18 10:36:07-08:00, 2011:11:18 10:37:52-08:00, 2011:11:18 10:47:40-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:19:12-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:19:19-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:26:35-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:26:41-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:31:52-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:33:24-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:40:41-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:41:25-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:41:44-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:51:13-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:53:06-08:00, 2011:11:18 11:53:28-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:11:57-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:13:07-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:17:36-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:18:35-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:19:07-08:00, 2011:11:18 12:19:34-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:18:34-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:22:57-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:23:34-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:29:08-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:31:12-08:00, 2011:11:18 13:36:03-08:00, 2011:11:18 14:23:56-08:00, 2011:11:18 14:28:45-08:00, 2011:11:18 14:32:24-08:00, 2011:11:18 14:36:12-08:00, 2011:11:18 14:36:42-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:14:09-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:31:23-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:32:03-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:32:17-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:35:35-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:35:47-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:46:24-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:46:36-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:49:22-08:00, 2011:11:18 15:51-08:00, 2011:11:18 16:11:19-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:08:22-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:08:45-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:28:58-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:31:07-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:54:56-08:00, 2011:11:21 09:57:23-08:00, 2011:11:21 10:41:10-08:00, 2011:11:21 10:49:01-08:00, 2011:11:21 11:22:31-08:00, 2011:11:21 11:24:54-08:00, 2011:11:21 14:24:26-08:00, 2011:11:21 14:46:17-08:00, 2011:11:21 15:24:16-08:00, 2011:11:21 15:29:35-08:00, 2011:11:21 15:31:17-08:00, 2011:11:21 16:06:50-08:00, 2011:11:21 16:24:53-08:00, 2011:11:21 16:26:45-08:00, 2011:11:21 16:29:07-08:00, 2011:11:21 16:40:32-08:00, 2011:11:22 07:58:03-08:00, 2011:11:22 08:21:52-08:00, 2011:11:22 08:27:01-08:00, 2011:11:22 09:05:11-08:00, 2011:11:22 09:38:18-08:00, 2011:11:22 11:22:15-08:00, 2011:11:22 11:34:05-08:00, 2011:11:22 11:35-08:00, 2011:11:22 11:36:52-08:00, 2011:11:22 11:52:48-08:00, 2011:11:22 12:04:24-08:00, 2011:11:22 12:04:46-08:00, 2011:11:22 12:07:14-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:01:27-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:24:50-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:31:20-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:35:10-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:39:23-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:52:57-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:55:21-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:56:55-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:58:28-08:00, 2011:11:22 14:59:45-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:26:47-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:31:35-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:31:35-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:45:39-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:50:46-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:56:28-08:00, 2011:11:22 15:58:50-08:00, 2011:11:23 08:58:16-08:00, 2011:11:23 14:20:14-08:00, 2011:11:28 08:35:44-08:00, 2011:11:28 09:25:52-08:00, 2011:11:28 09:49:46-08:00, 2011:11:28 09:58:36-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:03:48-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:14:57-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:16:35-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:17:55-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:20:06-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:48:28-08:00, 2011:11:28 10:58:42-08:00, 2011:11:28 11:00:09-08:00, 2011:11:28 11:05:26-08:00, 2011:11:28 11:05:47-08:00, 2011:11:29 11:01:23-08:00, 2011:11:29 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Manifest Placed Resolution Unit : Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches, Inches
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EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools
FCC ID Filing: KA2IR505LA1

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