My question is rooted in the fact that I don’t really understand what an “Access Point” can do — if they can serve as the source of an internet connection the same way as your cable modem’s internet device. It seems like they should. But there’s the question of how you log into them and set them up to talk to the remote router in question. I guess that will vary by device.
As for the VOIP interfaces, yes I’ve had several of them myself. I’ve got a couple from NetTalk in a box that I don’t use, one that supports WiFi and one that doesn’t.
The difference is, you plug a POTS phone into them. Not a router.
-David Schwartz
> On Oct 14, 2019, at 12:16 PM, Carruth, Rusty <Rusty.Carruth@smartm.com> wrote:
>
> I believe the answer is ‘yes, you can have the wifi “range extender” work that way’.
>
> Longer answer - my daughter once had a VOIP phone that required an Ethernet cable, could not use wifi.
> She only had wifi, but the company that she was working for also supplied a ‘wifi access box’ (about the size of a wall wart!, with an Ethernet jack) that she could use to ‘convert’ WiFI into wired for the phone they gave her
> Worked great. And I *think* that you weren’t limited to a single device on the wire….
>
>
> Rusty
>
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss