








🖨️ Connect, Print, Impress — Your Office’s Silent MVP
The StarTech.com 1-Port Wireless N USB 2.0 Network Print Server (PM1115UW) is a compact, high-speed print server supporting 150 Mbps wireless N and 10/100 Mbps Ethernet connections. Compatible with Windows, Mac, and Linux, it enables seamless sharing of any USB 2.0 printer across your network with easy setup options and robust wireless security protocols.




| Brand | StarTech |
| Product Dimensions | 7.11 x 5.84 x 2.54 cm; 49.9 g |
| Item model number | PM1115UW |
| Manufacturer | STARTECH.COM |
| Series | Wireless Print Server |
| Color | White |
| Form Factor | External |
| Connectivity Type | Wi-Fi |
| Wireless Type | 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n |
| Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
| Voltage | 5 Volts |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Operating System | Windows 8 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Mac OS X Mavericks (10.9) Linux Windows 10 Windows Server 2016 Windows Server 2019 |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Item Weight | 49.9 g |
T**N
Recently bought from amazon Tested, It's working fine & build quality is amazing
J**W
Was able to get on old laser printer to work on home network after the old usb print server failed . Easy to install and works well.
S**9
Overall ok.
S**R
This is an old StarTech design that just keeps working and working. They do ship a software wizard for some old OSs, but the wizard is completely unnecessary. I plugged my directly into the back of an ancient LaserJet 4, the wall wart into power, and an Ethernet patch cable to my LAN switch. In his review William R Johnston reminds us the device ships with its Ethernet address fixed at 192.168.0.10. To get this set to something different (I'm using a static address set by my DHCP server) I had to temporally plug the print server directly into a PC using an Ethernet crossover cable, then set my PC's address to something in the 192.168.0.* range. Next, I logged in with a web browser, went to TCP/IP configuration, and set the IP address the way I wanted (in my case using DHCP). Then I undid all that temporary network stuff and plugged everything into my LAN, told my DHCP service which IP address to use for the print server (since I want static for that). Finally went back to using the web browser to set the print server's name (with the address I told the DHCP server to use). Everything else just happened and it doesn't seem to matter which OS I try to print from... well, except newer Windows machines. MS has gone too far with the security thing and it's a chore to get anything working on a LAN, beyond connecting to the Internet. Anyway, if not an MS operating system just browser the network and there's your print server. Need the right driver locally installed for the printer you have, but the StarTech print server doesn't seem to need a driver. Print just works. Sweet! Anyway, far easier than setting up an old PC with a parallel port to be a print server. Far less power. It's tiny and fits on the back of your printer. And the only cabling (other than the wall wart) is Ethernet.
J**S
No es lo que aparenteba y no me funciono
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