Slurpr: Cool black box or jail bait?

Photo of author

Tim Higgins

The design is based on a Routerboard 532A motherboard with 564 daughterboard and can accept six miniPCI wireless cards. It runs Debian and uses load-balancing to combine the bandwidth from up to six wireless connections.

Pre-orders for deliveries starting in August are being accepted at Mark’s geektechnique.org site at a price of 999 Euros, which doesn’t include shipping or taxes.

Behold the Slurpr

Mark is aware of the legal ramifications of providing the product and is running two surveys to see whether WEP cracking capability should be included (82% say yes) and whether buyers would be willing to sign a waiver regarding the legal ramifications of using the product (77% say yes).

Will be interesting to see if this ever makes it into production. If you’re planning to attend The Next Web Conference in Amsterdam next week, you may get a chance to see the Slurpr in action.

Related posts

Waiting for Draft 2.0 updates

While the Wi-Fi Alliance's list of 802.11n Draft 2.0 certified products is growing longer, of course, there is still a catch. A product's appearance in the list doesn't necessarily mean that the products you can buy today are Draft 2.0 compliant. Nor does it mean that you can download firmware and drivers to bring them into compliance, either.

Why all the broken links?

In the continuing saga of getting my new web publishing system to behave (the system is Joomla, by the way), ...

Jumped the gun on Netgear 11n Draft 2.0

Come to find out that the news item we posted the other day about Netgear releasing 802.11n Draft 2.0 firmware ...