I'm not Dlink, for the record.
That's a load off.

So it's clear you're not the target audience for Securespot. But looking at the number of n00bs using PC's (the millions of infected PC's worldwide (zombie networks), the succesfull phishing scams and so on) Securespot can solve their problem for the entire home network. Yes, they can also ask the neighbour or local PC store to help them but most of the people will turn off the installed programs once they experience issues like unavailable websites or blocked LAN's
As a Mac user, I'm definitely not the target audience--and perhaps never will be, it would seem.
Also,
OpenDNS is not linked to any specific networking device, service provider, platform or hardware in general,
and it has positive ''word of mouth'' working for it at all tiers, not just experts.
SecureSpot is relatively obscure, and would seem to have a much narrower market of only those who find out about it most likely
after having purchased a
D-Link router.
Please do not project your own expertise of OpenDNS, AV and firewalls upon the rest of the world. Reality is so much worse that you should look at the product from the average users' point of view, not from your own expert perspective. And yes, compared to the 'average user level' you're considered an expert.
Appreciate the ''expert'' comment, but I'm far from it. I do know, however, of many companies, public libraries and universities who have implemented
OpenDNS with great ease and success.
The core of my previous post was from a Macintosh point of view having to do with my opinion that ''in a perfect world'' D-Link routers seem to be much better than
Apple branded devices and cost far less. My criticism is that
SecureSpot never overtly lets Mac users know that it will only work for the PC/
Windows platform, and makes Mac owners waste their 30-day trial period before, if ever, D-Link develops and/or releases a Mac-specific firmware/interface for
SecureSpot.
My last bone of contention is that even for
Windows users,
OpenDNS is a much easier implementation to cover everything but online anti-virus protection. It is, in fact, much more accessible to the ''newbie'' who doesn't know diddly-squat about dangerous exposure on the WWW--and it is free. In this down economy, I feel it would be responsible, if not just plain ''nice'' to inform people about a better way to spend their money than on
SecureSpot.
As for ''projecting'' -- I love those new Pico projectors! Was that what you were referring to?
