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Peripherals
Vista Mini KVM Switch
Cut down the desk clutter with a KVM switch
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Info |
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Product: |
Vista Mini KVM
Switch |
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From: |
Rose Electronics |
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Web: |
www.rosel.co.uk
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Price: |
£105 |
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Rating: |
10/10 |
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We like: |
Price, build
quality, audio |
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We don’t like: |
Socket Layout could
be a problem |
KVM switches allow you to use one keyboard, monitor
and mouse to control two or more PCs. KVM stands for Keyboard,
Video, Mouse but in this case it also includes audio which is
unusual, doubly so at this price.
Wiring It All Up
The Vista is at the bottom of the range of Rose
Electronics’ KVM switch range but despite this has a solid metal
case and an excellent build quality. To use it, you plug in your
keyboard, mouse, monitor and speakers (stereo only) at the rear then
plug each PC in to the matching sets of connectors on the left and
right.
The
result looks like an octopus having a bad hair day and leaves your
desk covered in looping cables. That said, Rose do try hard to
mitigate this by supplying a pair of special cables that combine the
monitor, keyboard and mouse cables in to a single length with the
ends breaking out in to the constituent parts. Each cable comes
complete with an adapter for the older AT style keyboard sockets as
well as a serial mouse adapter. It would have been neater to have
had all the socketry at the back with just the switch at the front
but this would need a much bigger case. At the price, it’s hard to
get overly critical at this design decision especially given that
their more expensive models work that way anyway. A pair of stereo
minijack-ended audio cables are supplied to handle the speakers.
Another
feature which is unusual at this price is the video bandwidth.
Budget switches often limit you to a resolution of 1280x1024 or
perhaps 1600x1200. The Vista Mini manages resolutions up to
2400x2000 although it is unlikely your PC can manage that right now.
Good for future proofing though.
Switching
The front of the Vista has a plethora of LEDs to
show what is going on including status, select 1 & 2 (PCs)and power
1 & 2 (PCs). There is also a reset button and the all important
select button which toggles between each PC.
With it all set up you can sit in front of your
monitor, keyboard and mouse and at the press of a button switch from
PC to PC. This can be a major boon and is far more useful that it
sounds. It saves space, power (only one monitor) and allows you to
jump between machines without moving from your seat.
Keyboard Control
As well as the manual switch on the unit itself, you
can switch machines using a keyboard short cut. This means you could
actually hide the whole thing away thus avoiding wires all over the
desktop as mentioned above. You can also request it to work in scan
mode where it switches from one machine to the other at regular
selectable intervals. Most people will find this rather useless but
in a small office where you might be monitoring two servers, it can
be a life saver when error messages pop up that you might otherwise
miss.
Other keyboard shortcuts include the ability to
reset the mouse should one of the PCs get confused by the switching,
control over the keyboard repeat rate, toggling between PS/2 and
serial mouse mode and so on. You should find that anything you are
likely to need to do is catered for here.
Finally, whichever set up you have selected for each
PC type can be saved to the Vista’s memory to save reconfiguring
every time the PCs are booted.
Conclusion
The Rose Electronics Vista Mini KVM is a sparkling
little product. It’s well built, comes with a generous bundle of
high quality and ingenious cabling and even includes a natty little
instruction booklet that covers all the functions clearly. With
competing products costing around £135 including cables, the Vista
Mini is a clear winner.
Iain Laskey
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