802.11g on a Firewire G3

My router handles 11g. What do I need to use 11g on my Powerbook?

The only option if you have an old PB to upgrade to 802.11g is to purchase an PCMCIA 802.11g card. Or you could use a 802.11g wireless bridge (but this is not very portable, but can be a solution for an old iMac).
You want a third party WLAN Cardbus cards based on the same Broadcomm chipset that Apple used in the Airport Extreme which will work in a Mac running OS X 10.2.6 or later and Airport 3.1 or later.
Companies using the Broadcomm chipset include: Linksys, Buffalo Technology, Belkin.
Not all cards though do work.
Another option is to use an Atheros card with the Orangeware driver.
The other thing to consider is that do you really really need the extra speed of 802.11g. The only real benefit is if you are transferring really really large files in an internal network (eg video files) and has no "real" impact on wireless internet access (as 11Mbps is generally a lot faster than your average 512Kbps ADSL speed).

Similar Messages

  • How's playback from external hard drives and 802.11g?

    I'm thinking about putting my movies on an external Firewire hard drive connected to my iMac Intel Core 2 Duo.
    Does it make a difference in playback jumpiness if any with:
    1. The movies on an external Firewire hard drive connected to my Mac?
    2. The movies on an external USB 2 hard drive connected to my Mac?
    3. 802.11g shared network with one other computer and internet connection.
    4. 802.11g adhoc network and second 802.11g network for internet on other machines in the neighborhood?
    5. 802.11n adhoc network with 802.11n upgraded machine and a second 802.11g network for internet with other machines in the neighborhood?
    6. Must the video play on the AppleTV hard drive to stream to the TV, or can video that is not on the AppleTV be played back?
    7. Unrelated question, but do TV shows show menus which are alphabetical with submenus which are also alphabetical?
    Please only people who have already received their AppleTV let me know what you find.

    what if I want all my movies and shows and music served from my HD but my photos to reside on the ATV...is that possible!?It is what I am doing. Basically, I simply set the main iTunes host to sync all music (115 files) and all photos (928), but nothing else. When I want to look at the photos (with music), I merely switch to the "TV" (sync) mode. When I want to stream any of the movies, TV Shows, and/or Podcasts, I just switch to the Named Music Library (streaming) mode for the same iTunes host.

  • Is 802.11b/g faster then 802.11g

    The wireless network I have at my house has two Powerbook G4s (Both with Airport Extreme Cards) connected to it and I am wondering if Switching to 802.11g is faster then 802.11b/g. I dont have any computers connecting that need 802.11b.
    Thnx

    OK, Just to give you an idea about the difference between the 2.
    If you are accessing the internet and downloading things and only have a DSL connection or just ordinary dial up then you may just as well set your Macs to 'b'. Signal/Bandwidth strength is greater with 'b'. Most dial up is '56k' and mmost DSL is 512 to 2mbs. So just using 11b is more than plenty. But if you have DSL from 8 up to 24meg speeds then 'g' is what you should use. But remember that the '54' speed is only the transfer / communication speed between 2 points. You can transfer a large file say a CD of music from one iTunes on one Mac to another Mac (example) and use 11g. You could of course double this by using a ethernet connection between the 2 Macs at 100mbps or even Firewire at 400 ot 800.
    So in a nutshell use 'g' if you are transfering large data file and need to minimize time. But then of course you will do what suits your environment best.
    Cheers

  • Powerbook G3 (WallStreet) OSX compatible with  PCMCIA Belkin WiFi 802.11G ?

    Hello
    Do you know it the PCMCIA card Belkin WiFi 802.11G sold on the Apple Store is compatible with an old Powerbook G3 WallStreet (without USB and Firewire)?
    I will install the macOsX 10.3 system on it.
    Thanks for your help

    Michel,
    Belkin has had a variety of wifi PC cards with confusing model numbers and version numbers.
    The Belkin F5D7010: Supposedly there are three versions(!); v1 and v2 supported Apple's AirPort software (Mac OS X 10.2.8 or newer and AirPort 3.1.1 or newer) since it used the Broadcom chipset. Then v3 was released and it was no longer supported by AirPort. BelKin then released drivers for v3 which apparently solved the problem.
    The Belkin F5D7011: This card supposedly uses the Broadcom chipset and is fully supported by AirPort.
    http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?MerchantId=&ProductId=179466#
    Or you could buy one of these cards where there is no question about support:
    http://www.sonnettech.com/product/aria_extreme.html
    http://www.macsense.com/product/broadband/WPE800.html
    http://www.asante.com/products/productsLvl3/AL5403_XG.asp
    http://www.buffalotech.com/wireless/products/airstation/WLICBG54A.html

  • Airport Drives Me CRAZY! New 802.11n Network Slower Than Old 802.11g/b

    I've been using Macs since 1988 and consider myself an advanced user. However, every time I setup a new Airport wireless network or re-configure an existing one, I feel like a helpless newbie trying to figure out how to open a folder on my desktop. No matter how many times I read the manual or the help files or these forums, I can never grasp what seems like it should be a simple path from A to B to C.
    Anyway, here's my current situation: I've been successfully (I think) running a 6 year old AP Extreme Base Station [AE] (in my home office addition) and 2 Airport Expresses [AX] (one AX roughly 15 feet from the base station--through sheetrock, and the second AX roughly 30 feet from the first AX--through sheetrock and some wooden stairs. (so roughly 45 feet from AE to 2nd AX). It wasn't the speediest thing going but it did the trick with older Macs.
    I recently bought a MacBook Pro which supports 802.11n. I most often use this laptop at the point in the house furthest away from the AE (Base Station) The AE (Base Station) is in my home office connected to my MacPro desktop (see #1 below). In addition, the family iMac is also in that room furthest from the AE. Using the new MacBook Pro with the old 802.11/g/b network turned out to be painfully slow. I was experiencing the same slow network connection my family has complained about for years with their older Macs and 802.11g/b.
    I decided it was time to upgrade the whole network, if only to speed up my MacBook Pro connection. Bought new 802.11n Airport Extreme (MC340LL/A) and 2 new 802.11n Airport Expresses (MB321LL/A). Setup did not go smoothly. Again, my normally competent Mac persona was reduced to a babbling three-year-old. Had three different Apple techs on the phone trying to help me through it. Got different, contradictory instructions from the last two. Finally got all three units working, only to find that not only does my MacBook Pro seem even more sluggish than when connected to the old 802.11g/b network, but my wife tells me web pages are taking at least twice as long to load as with the old network.
    As concisely as I can lay this out:
    *1. Airport Extreme (Base Station)*
    Connected via Ethernet from its WAN port to my Comcast cable modem. One Ethernet (LAN) port on that AE is then connected via Ethernet to my Netgear 8-port Ethernet switch. Ethernet from switch to Ethernet port 1 on my MacPro. (MacPro does NOT have an Airport card because I forgot to order one. Also I confirmed that this setup was functional by connecting to the AE wirelessly with my MacBook Pro showing the name I'd given the new network prior to adding the two AX's to the mix).
    Some Airport Extreme settings of note (all accessed via "Manual Setup" button):
    Airport Tab > Summary
    Version 7.5.1
    Wireless Mode: Create a wireless network
    Channel: 149 (Automatic), 1 (Automatic)
    Wireless Clients: 3
    Airport Tab > Base Station:
    Allow Setup over WAN: Unchecked
    Airport Tab > Wireless:
    Allow this network to be extended: Checked
    Airport Tab > Guest Network:
    Nothing checked
    Airport Tab > Access Control:
    MAC Address Access Control: Not Enabled
    Internet Tab > Internet Connection:
    Connect Using: Ethernet
    Ethernet WAN Port: Automatic (Default)
    Connection Sharing: Share a public IP address [Think this one is probably wrong]
    Internet Tab > TCP/IP:
    Configure IPv4: Using DHCP
    Internet Tab > DHCP:
    Shows Beginning & Ending Address
    Internet Tab > NAT:
    Enable default host at: Unchecked and blank field
    Enable NAT Port Mapping Protocol: Checked
    Internet Tab > Advanced
    Didn't touch anything here, so all at defaults
    *2. Airport Express #1: Living Room Express (Closest to AE (Base Station)*
    Airport Tab > Summary
    Version 7.4.2
    Wireless Mode: Extend a wireless network
    Connect using: Wireless Network
    Channel: 1 (Automatic)
    Wireless Clients: 1
    Airport Tab > Base Station:
    Allow Setup over the Internet using Bonjour: Unchecked
    Airport Tab > Wireless:
    Wireless Mode: Extend a wireless network
    Allow wireless clients: checked
    Airport Tab > Access Control:
    MAC Address Access Control: Not Enabled
    Internet Tab > Internet Connection:
    Connect using: Greyed-out, not selectable
    Connection sharing: Greyed-out, not selectable
    Internet Tab > TCP/IP:
    Configure IPv4: Using DHCP
    Shows IP Address
    Internet Tab > Advanced
    Didn't touch anything here, so all at defaults
    *3. Airport Express #2: Dining Room Express (Furthest from AE (Base Station)*
    Airport Tab > Summary
    Version 7.4.2
    Wireless Mode: Extend a wireless network
    Connect using: Wireless Network
    Channel: 1 (Automatic)
    Wireless Clients: 2
    Airport Tab > Base Station:
    Allow Setup over the Internet using Bonjour: Unchecked
    Airport Tab > Wireless:
    Wireless Mode: Extend a wireless network
    Allow wireless clients: checked
    Airport Tab > Access Control:
    MAC Address Access Control: Not Enabled
    Internet Tab > Internet Connection:
    Connect using: Greyed-out, not selectable
    Connection sharing: Greyed-out, not selectable
    Internet Tab > TCP/IP:
    Configure IPv4: Using DHCP
    Shows IP Address
    Internet Tab > Advanced
    Didn't touch anything here, so all at defaults
    SETUP/GOALS:
    With Airport Extreme (Base Station) as the starting point, have the two Airport Express units with the strongest, fastest signal possible, provide Internet access (and file sharing, iTunes speakers capability) to three Macs (one older iMac, one older PowerBook and my new MacBookPro). Again, I believe my new MacBook Pro is the only one with 802.11n support, so I don't expect the other Macs to take advantage of the speed boost offered by the three new 802.11n devices.
    +Any and all help with this will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!+

    {quote}With the AirPort Extreme, in the AirPort panel, Wireless tab, click on the button for "Wireless Network Options", check the box for "5 GHz Network Name", and enter a different network name. (That can be trivially different, such as the name of the main network suffixed with an underscore and the digit 5.) Once configured that way, connect your "N" gear to each network in turn to see if one is any better than the other. (If you're wondering what effect this would have, it allows segregating your "N" gear from the older gear to prevent the older gear from slowing down your network. However, distance and interference from things like walls may negate any advantage.){quote}
    William: I was gone most of yesterday, but had a chance to implement your recommendations today. I added the 5 GHz network as you suggested, but in order to connect to that at all with my 802.n11 MacBokk Pro, I need to be within a few feet of the AE (base station). If I try to access that network even from the next room (well within reach of both the AE and the livingroom AX, I get one bar and "failure to connect" messages just trying to logon to that network.
    However, I did some experimenting that (as of right now, anyway) resulted in much faster network access, not only from my MacBook, but also from the older iMac which is the furthest Mac from the AE. According to my wife, that iMac is "loading web pages faster than I've ever seen them!"
    Here's what I did:
    1. Moved all three units to places where it seemed they would have the least amount of interference with the clearest path from unit to unit, also raising the height of both AXs from about 2-3 feet from the floor to about 5-6 feet from the floor.
    2. Changed one setting on the AE (base station): Wireless Tab > Wireless Network Options > Multicast Rate ---> Changed this from Low to High.
    I have a feeling the location shifts made the real difference, but I will try changing the multicast rate back to "Low" just to see what happens.
    Paul

  • How many users or devices does an old 802.11g airport express support?

    I've got three old 802.11g airport expresses that make up my home network.  One is my base station hooked to my cable modem.  the second I used as accss point for my satellite tv box.  The third is hooked up to my stereo.  I have an ipad, macbook, PC and a doogle plugged into my flat panel tv.  I usually don't have my mac and PC on at the same time but I have lately and I lose the network connection on both machines.  I can't reconnect on either machine.  My base station goes yellow so I unplug it a few minutes and plug it back in.  Then everything is find if I only have one machine.  I assume my trouble comes from trying to put too many devices on the network, right?  If I buy a new airport extreme, will it work with my old airport expresses?  Or what's the solution to my network problem?  Thanks.

    Hi - first of all is the base station solid yellow or blinking yellow - if it is solid then there is an electrical problem - if it is blinking then there should be an error message in the Airport Utility  - each Express can handle 10 wireless clients - the base station can administer 199 internal IP addresses so I don't that the number of users is an issue - it sounds like a connection conflict - however to address you second question, you are using old technology with new technology now - so to use a new Extreme with old Expresses would be defeating your purpose - in my opinion instead you should get 3 new Expresses - $99x3 and you would be getting a fast new system  - or $180 for a new Extreme and still have a slow system - but if you want 3 gigabit ports and the ability to connect a hard drive in a base station then an Extreme and 2 Expresses is the ideal solution - and I fully understand the economics involved so the choice is yours - if I have caused you to have more questions, please ask.

  • Time to upgrade to 802.11g???

    Any views would be appreciated - I'm running a 802.11b wireless router with an iMac and PB connected. Basically, is it worth investing in 802.11g (AirPort Extreme Base Station)?
    Thanks

    There are so many factors to consider when creating a wireless network. 802.11b advertised throughput is 11mbps and 802.11g is 54mbps. But the actual throughput for these is typically 4-7mbps and 22-27mbps respectively.
    With security encryption like WPA, there is additional overhead that lowers throughput.
    Other important things to consider/remember is that the radio in the AEBS handles one data packet per user at a time. So, if you and a friend were both downloading a file, the radio is not simultaneously sending the two of you data; it sends packets to each of you one at a time. The more users using your wireless connection, the slower it will seem.
    Finally, it all comes down to Internet link you have. How much bandwidth does your ISP provide? Your ISP may support less bandwidth than the AEBS is capable of, therefore making the ISP your limitation.
    Sorry - no clear answer. I have an AEBS (802.11g) and it's nice...if that helps.
    Various Macs and PC's Mac OS X (10.4)
    Various Macs and PC's   Mac OS X (10.4)  

  • Possible to use 2 AEBS to remove the 802.11g bottleneck?

    I have a Sony PS3 and lately I have noticed when playing Call of Duty 4 that I will see an enemy, shoot them, they don't die, they shoot me, and I'm dead. Upon replay, they see a totally different story. They see only me coming around the corner, no shots fired, and they have an easy shot.
    I have Road Runner and consistently get 14.5-15Mbit down and 750Kbps up. I am connected from the modem to my AEBS, and then 802.11g from that to the PS3. I've opened ports on the airport, restarted, etc... nothing seems to fix it. I am thinking that the latency from going from PS3 to AEBS to the game server may be the issue??
    The AEBS and PS3 are 2 floors apart, so running a gigabit cable between them isn't an option - but what about getting another 802.11n AEBS and hooking the PS3 up to that via gigabit? So the network would then go cable to AEBS -> 802.11n ->AEBS ->gigabit ethernet ->PS3
    Would this help, or hurt?

    This might help but it's difficult to say without knowing absolutely where the latency was occurring. You might consider moving the PS3 temporarily just for testing purposes to see if you can reduce latency by plugging directly into the AEBS. If that works, then it's reasonable to consider adding another one. You would also need to make sure that you didn't have any G devices connected if you wanted the best results.

  • Airport Express (Model with 802.11G +54MBPS Mac/PC and Set Up Issues

    Hi,
    We have a 4 Mac and 1 PC Household. Cable Internet Service by Roadrunner.Cable model (owned) connected to a D-Link 802.11G wi fi router (by ethernet from cable modem)in the family room , then out to a Imac (the half moon base and LCD screen with a airport card also in the family room and the closet computer to the D-Link
    router, (we did add a D-Link antenna to the router ? about 10 months ago (a D-Link ANT24-0700 (Version 1.2)and a HP 4 in 1 printer attached via USB to the Imac
    ,a eMac 1.25 ghz 1Gb ram with airpot card also connected wirelessly (no printer attached on the same floor but in a ajoinging room about 20 feet from the Router, and another eMac 1.0 Ghz 1Gb ram with airport card in the upstairs part of our house (a bedroom) and no issue with Internet connection (it has a Epson 3in 1 printer attached via USB, and a MacBook Pro with 802.11N wireless card in side , bought for a Christmas/Birthday Present and also for college.It to has no issues with the Internet where ever it may be in the house. Our sole PC a HP tower with a added D-Link WDA -2320 Range Booster Desktop Adapter (802.11G) and we added a D-Link Antenna same model as the other a ANT24-0700 to help with Internet access which it did as well as adding some ram to increase page loading time etc. It does not have a printer attached. I will get to the Topic Area now
    The Airport Express. I was not involved in the set-up as I was laid up due to a bad back and post major knee surgery , But I always (especially recently) wondered why the light was amber and blinking. I read through the manual and also
    Apple.com support and MacFixit.com (which is under construction and moved to part of Cnet.com)and then went to the Airport Express Discussion area (sorry for being so wordy) I need a Twitter account to post!) We have a network name for the D-Link and the computers all were added and it also supports a Xbox 360, a Sony PlayStation 3 and a Nintendo Wi (in online use without issue) but..
    A network was also as it appears to myself) for the Airport Express and under the half moon bars showing connection strenght (there is our D-Link network "phoenix" with security protection WPA2 I believe) as I have set up the router, We had a Apple Base station prior that was ? 802.11B (a half moon white unit) still have it in the box ) So for normal daily use, checking e-mail and internet use all of the computers use the "phoenix" or D-Link supported Router 802.11G
    and The other network calld Apple Network with numbers and letters after it (and hopefully security) password is unknown , The Airport Express is set up connected via USB to a HP B&W laser printer which has saved quite a bit of money on ink, To utilize that printer you must switch from "phoenix" The D-Link router network to the Apple Network (followed by letters and numbers) The Imac and the eMac in the family room and a ajoing room (after switching to the Apple Network
    can than print to the lasr printer. The eMac upstairs and the HP Windows XP Professional software can not print to the laser printer (yet the HP PC shows it as a individual network and a strong signal, equal to the Internet connection from the D-Link, and the eMac (after switching under the half moon (not the proper name I am sure) to get to the Apple Network to print , it will not print, yet it shows a 5 bar signal, same as the D-Link connection. I do believe we have two seperate networks (but do not understand why the two Mac's in the family room can print to the laser printer by simply switching networks and then file and print. ** One other 9probaly major item is that it states to set up the Airport Express with a Mac With OSX 10.4 or later (at the time of set up, we had the Imac and two eMac's all running Panther OSX 10.3.9 9which they continue to have installed) We obtained the HP Tower and Monitor and HP 4in 1 printer ust before Christmas in 2008 and the MacBook Pro in Mid December 2009 (current model and running Snow Leopard 10.6. The HP Tower runs Windows Xp Professional (Service Pack 3) so the MacBook Pro which is much more mobile , could be used to do the set-up, or the HP Tower coulf be moved temprarily, I do recall if Router changes (at least with The D-Link You need to be connected by Ethernet to the Mac
    that would be doing the set up/configuration of the router (and it runs OSX 10.3.9 and is a older Mac (with 80Gb Hard drive that is partioned for OS9 and OSX as well , it is under a Ghz processor wise and less than 1 Gb of ram as the last ram slot required a seal to be broken and 256mb of ram (?) could be added
    it has 768 mb of ram but knock on wood running well. We use Lacie external drives
    on the Imac and both eMac's and need to get external drives for the HP PC as well as the Mac Book Pro (15" screen)
    I apoogize if I repeated myself, and rambled but I wanted to (in one post) to explain our set up and network configuration
    Questions
    1) if indeed it is that the two networks is true and a set yp that is not correct
    can the Airport Express be configured without opening up the router (when ever that happens it seems one computer is unable to get online and each time its a differnt one a Mac or veen the PC
    The PC under My Computer and Networks clearly shows the wto distinct and seperate netwoks with strong signals and the distance is not far (it is through a floor as the other emac and the PC are upstairs and cabling by ethernet is not a option
    2) If I need to open the router would I add the Airport Express as a client as if it was one of the computers or gaming systems on the network? (adding the Mac adress or IP address (not sure how you find the Mac address) and its been while since the router was opened up for any additions or work on it.
    3) would it be on the same channel as the router or not ?
    4) Hopefully with proper configuration the light will stay on (and green) on the A/E and the eMac and HP PC will be able to print to the laser printer. Currentlt
    when anything needs printed from the PC its put on a Flasg Drive and plugged in tothe Imac and the the Apple Network is selected and data printed, The eMac upstairs has the option of using the attached Epson 3 in one or doing the Flash stick work around.
    I would be verya appreciative if some one took a look at the set up above and advised me of what is right, what is not right* and what to do to fix things up
    I would imagine after proper set up, delete the Apple Network from the PC and eMac upstairs and ? all of the computers as we should have one base station (the D-link and the spoke (the A/E connected by UBS to the A/E (it may be ethernet but the cable connection from the A/E to the HP laser printer is correct (the rest of the A/E set up ... Please , tell me where it is and where it should be
    and ? any idea why we can print to the laser printer down stairs and not up stairs ? it did mention printer set up with Panther as possible, page 43 of themanual we have un chaper 5 Tips and Troubleshooting (under whn your printer isn't responding) (we do not have the interfereance listed in the manual,
    our phones are land line, one 900 mghz and the others 5.8 ghz
    It is possible to move the A/E and laser printer if that would help the two computers (desktops) upstairs) bt the distance is way less than 150 but their is a floor and ? duct work (metal ) but I think here is a place to stop typing and let some of the experts on the discussion forums take a look.
    one lst note (as the lap top will be going off to college in the fall (runnning Snow Leopard, and the other 3 Mac's run Panther OSX 10.3.9 should the HP PC windows Xp Professional be the computer to set up the air port express and the Airport Utility proram installed & would this conflict with the current Router (set up by a Macc running OSX 10.3.9 (Panther) i.e (should both set ups be on the same computer?) but actually aThe D-Link is OSX10.3.9 compatible (and 802.11G) and set up requires ethernet connection to a Mac (You type in the numbers and . etc and password as administror and you are in, or should the admin be on the same cpmpuer for the router and A/E ?
    (and considering a Airport Extreme Base Station as well as dual frequency simulataneus and 802.11N (for the laptop now) and future, or wait. The 802.11
    in theory would broadcast farther..?? even if computers had 802.11b(our Mac Desk tops and the PC 802.11B card
    Thanks Again!!!
    Many, Many Thanks
    amnienttales

    William Boyd Jr.
    Hello again,
    D-Link Router is model DGL-4300 (along with a D-Link ANT24-0700 Omnidirectional
    7dbi Antenna . Our Cable Internet ISP (Roadrunner) provides consumers with dynamic ISP address's . All Mac's have Airport Cards and The Hp Tower XW4550 has a D-Link Rangebooster G Desktop Adapter WDA-2320 (also with a D-Link ANT24-0700 Omnidirectional 7 dbi Antenna (the PC OS is Win XP Pro Service Pack 3) The 3 desktop Mac's run OSX Panther 10.3.9 , The 15" MacBook Pro OS is OSX 10.6 Snow
    Leopard (not sure what is after the .6 (right now) D-Link's website is
    http://www.dlink.com , I have configured this router multiple times in the past.
    also added as clients on the network (Utilizing the D-Link Router) are a X-Box 360, Sony Play Station PS3, and a Nintendo Wii all of which have on line ability
    and enables online video game play with any one online.
    As mentioned prior the Airport Port Express is Model A1084 Part No. M9447OLL/A
    which is USB conected to a HP LaseJet B&W , model 1020 and some how the two computers near it can switch to the Airport Express Network from the D-Link Router based Network and print wirelessly to the A/E connected LaserJetPrinter
    I realize I will need to reconfigure the D-Link Router and add the A/E as a client. I will try first to use the Airport Utility and see if I can do anything
    Utilizing it (adding it to the D-Link network, I think its unlikely but worth a try but* the password is unknown but I have a few guess's as to what it may be.
    I do have the necessary admin and network paswwords to cconfigure the D-Link Router,
    1) * If the the A/E Utility experiment fails and I need to re-configure the router * do I need to (as per the Airport Express Set Up Guide (Use a Mac with OSX 10.4 or later or a PC with Win Xp Home or Professional (have a desk top PC that has the specs) and The Mac Book Pro meets the Mac Spec's)
    If I can not get a password to work on the A/E I would reset it using the reset button
    And before plugging in the A/E , connect the appropraite cables in our case a USB cable to the LaserJet Printer then plug in the A/E
    2) I would then connect by Ethernet from Either the Mac Laptop or The PC to the D-Link router (if not the router will not set-up correctly)
    3) The one question that puzzles me is that we are not using the A/E as a base
    but a client
    in two sections(Using Airport Express , connecting a Printer via USB
    and use Airprt Utility to create a new network or join a new newWireless computers using Mac OSX 10.2.7 (Tiger) or later or a PC with Windows XP and it then goes in to the steps of ising the printer for both a Mac and a PC (using Bonjour on the CD that came with the A/E (this appears to contradict needing to use Mac OSx 10.4 or a PC with Win Xp set the A/E up for use as a printer
    (joiing a new network or existig one)
    And in Chapter 5 Tips and Roubleshooting= Your Airport Express Status Light Flashes amber & Your Printer is not responding (it is flashing amber and the printer does not respond to the two computers upsstairs (one Mac running OSX 10.3.9 & One PC running WinXp and its states to make sure the printer is selected
    in the Printer list o client computers, to do this on a Mac using OSX 10.3 or later , open Printer Set Up Utility and follow steps and if a PC with Windows XP , Open Printers and faxes and then follow steps
    in Closing ? can I configure the A/E Utility with a Mac using 10.3.9 as above or
    ? Per Chapter 1 Getting Started use a Mac with OSX 10.4 or later or a PC with Windows Xp Home or Professional
    Perhaps I am taking the tips and trouble shooting and Printer Set up out of context or does the getting Started Computer specs contradict them or are they
    for use if the A/E was going to be a Base Station and not a client..
    Will keep at it,
    ambienttales

  • Airport Extreme 802.11g base station loses internet connection often

    I just installed an Airport Extreme base station (802.11g version Apple Base Station V5.7) last week. And it keeps dropping my internet connection at least once a day.
    I simply replaced an old SMC Barricade wireless router that died (and was a POS). But I only had to reset the SMC about once every 2 months. Nothing else has changed in my setup. Only the router/base station is different.
    The wireless part is fine. Even when the internet connection gets dropped the hard wired AND wireless clients can still access the local network. Reseting the DSL modem has no effect. The only solution is to power cycle (unplug and plug back in) the AEBS OR restart it from Airport Admin utility.
    But you can't do that from offsite. When the AEBS drops the internet connection I can't access my office network from home!
    Is there a place in Airport Admin Utility which tells you the status of your internet connection like most generic wireless routers with web-based software do?
    Any ideas on resolving this?
    Thanks

    "Any ideas on resolving this?"
    Looter,
    Based on your description, open AirPort Admin Utility and check the configuration of your main base station on the "Internet" pane. If you're using ethernet cable from the modem to the base station, the top selector [Connect Using:] should show "Ethernet" and the second selector [Configure:] should show "Using DHCP"
    Also, check your iMac's System Preferences>Network at "Show: AirPort" and check the PPPoE pane which should show no entries (unless your isp requires its use), and the TCP/IP pane which should show "Configure IPv4:" as being "Using DHCP" - while all other info is filled in automatically.
    "Is there a place in Airport Admin Utility which tells you the status of your internet connection like most generic wireless routers with web-based software do?"
    No, the AirPort Admin Utility is not web-based, only located on your computer with the information available to it necessary to operate the AirPort system. It does not actually administer the signal. I think that is done only by System Preferences>Network.
    "I'm actually referring to the Airport Express base station not my MacBook Pro's wireless connection. Is there anywhere in the Airport Admin Utility software that tells you the status of the AEBS' internet connection NOT the wireless connection."
    No, that info is not available in that utility. The information you seek is at System Preferences>Network, but only after the system scans for it. Click the "Assist me..." button and then, on the "Do you need assistance setting up a new network connection or solving a network problem?" panel that opens, click the "Diagnostics..." button. A "Network Diagnostics" panel will then open and if its scan shows there is no internet the lights to the left of "Internet" and "Server" will be yellow instead of green. Meanwhile, it continues scanning for the connection until it is re-established. I determined this by pulling my cable from the phone jack, later reinserting it.
    Further information that may be helpful to you can undoubtedly be found in threads such as this other one:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=884049&tstart=0
    edit-
    In re-reading, I may not have given you what you need. It sounds as if you may be "timing out" somehow on your connection. You might want to check around at some of your log-on settings to see if there is that possibility connected to one of them, even though the only thing I can think of is the "Renew DHCP Lease" button which is unknown to me, as I've never used it.
    Message was edited by: myhighway

  • Creating a 802.11g network with Base Station in "802.11n only" mode

    I still have some legacy products running 802.11b/g, and want my Base Station to run in "n" only mode at 5GHz to keep the rest of the network as fast as possible.
    My current strategy is to take an old 802.11g router, put it into access point mode, and connect it to the Base Station with an ethernet cable.
    Unfortunately, this access point seems to fail frequently - connected devices can't find the access point, and rebooting the access point will temporarily fix the problem.
    I'm wondering if an AirPort Express can replace the access point. It can run as "create a wireless network" in a mixed b/g/n mode. I would then cable it to the base station.
    Will this slow down the remainder of the "pure" "n" network?
    Steve

    I was asking something similar in another thread. What I'd like to do is run my existing b/g AP as it is and enable an Airport Extreme Base Station in AP mode in n-only mode. Supposedly, you can do this.

  • Xbox 360, My Airport Express 802.11g, and my ever more looming suicide...

    I hate working on networks, especially when it comes to making Xboxs work on em. But Im a slave to live and I MUST have it. Now I have connected flawlessly to linksys routers, but this Airport is making want to take my cranium and bash it into the sidewalk until the blood drains from my skull, resulting in my inevitable and permanent resting state. So it goes...
    Ok, I'm not going to kill myself, but christ will someone help me out here?
    Heres what I got on the Network screen
    IP- 10.0.1.2
    Subnet- 255.255.255.0
    Router/Gateway/Whatever- 10.0.1.1
    DHCP- is set to automatic
    I have 2 Macbooks connected to this router, they work fine, as well as 2 iPod touches
    On the Xbox360
    -IP set to automatic, given 169.254.100.112, I assume this was assigned by the router, but this makes no sense because when I run diagnostics I get IP Address Failed. THIS IS THE MAJOR ISSUE IM ADDRESSING RIGHT NOW... But I assume DNS is gonna fail even if I get IP going. I could use all the help I can get y'all.
    Subnet- 255.255.255.0
    Gateway- 10.0.1.1
    DNS- 10.0.1.1
    Wireless mode 802.11g
    Network- vargas
    Network type- Infrastructure Channel 1
    Security WEP.
    I hate life.
    This is not working. I have called my genius bloody uncle, and even he seemed stunned at the matter. This is ridiculous... I hate it so much. Hours I've wasted for nothing. Someone, anyone, if youre reading this and you think you can help, please, please...

    Added note, I'm running tiger OS X 10.4.11. I think I have an airport express, its my step dads. I think. I wanna say I wanna manually assign IP to something like 10.0.1.10 but I already tried that. To no avail. I've tried restarting the router and xbox and nothing really works.

  • Time Capsule slow as 802.11g WAP

    I've been having trouble with my wireless network since I received my 1TB Time Capsule. AppleTV quit syncing, .Mac Sync hung repeatedly, and Printing via the Time Capsule stutters. I only have 802.11g hosts on my network, so 802.11n performance isn't something I'm evaluating.
    The goal of this testing is to assess the Time Capsule as a network access point for 802.11g hosts. Disk read/write is not part of this experiment. Each of the measurements below are results from the exact same test -- measure internet upload and download performance to a test server on the speedtest.net network.
    My topology is as follows:
    SBC DSL -> 2Wire modem -> TimeCapsule
    For the tests below, I connected my MacBook Pro to each device, wirelessly via 802.11g and direct connect via Ethernet and ran the test from speedtest.net. Since I have a 3Mb connection, the speed of my ethernet is irrelevant. The results of the testing is below and the results show that using the Time Capsule as an 802.11g hub is slow, in fact 75% slower.
    Internet Performance (3Mb service)
    network performance -- connecting via
    *660k dl/430 ul -- TimeCapsule (802.11g - single base station, or as WDS main)*
    2546k dl/429 ul -- TimeCapsule (Ethernet Hard Wired)
    2547 dl/432 ul -- 2Wire 802.11g
    2546 dl/431 ul -- 2Wire (Ethernet Hard Wired)
    My conclusion, based on this testing and from several posts in this discussion board is that the Time Capsule exhibits poor performance for hosts connecting via 802.11g.
    Is there some setup thing I'm missing?
    Message was edited by: JustStone

    JustinK101 wrote: I suppose I could plug my MacBook into the TC via a gigbit cable and see the speed then, but the whole point was to do wireless backups.
    The initial backup should have been wired. Future incremental backups would not be this large and wireless backups should be okay.

  • Cisco Systems vs "CSIRO" 802.11a and 802.11g infringed upon the '069 patent

    Hi,
    any news about Cisco Systems and the "CSIRO" 802.11a and 802.11g infringed upon the '069 patent ?
    http://www.buffalotech.com/products/wireless/
    Dear Customer
    As you may be aware, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation ("CSIRO") sued Buffalo, Inc. and Buffalo Technology (USA), Inc. ("Buffalo"), for alleged infringement of United States Patent No. 5,487,069 ("the '069 patent"). Subsequently, CSIRO also asserted its patent against the entire wireless LAN industry, including, Microsoft, Intel, Accton, SMC and Netgear.
    In it's lawsuit against Buffalo, CSIRO claimed certain Buffalo wireless networking products compliant with IEEE standards 802.11a and 802.11g infringed upon the '069 patent. Buffalo believed at that time and continues to believe that there are no grounds for CSIRO's allegations of infringement. The United States district court, however, found Buffalo to infringe the '069 patent and enjoined the importation and sale of Buffalo's IEEE 802.11a and 802.11g compliant products.
    CSIRO's lawsuits are against the entire wireless LAN industry and could affect the supply of wireless LAN products by any manufacturer, not just Buffalo. The entire industry is resisting CSIRO's attempts to enjoin the sale of wireless LAN products. Recently, Microsoft, 3COM Corporation, SMC Networks, Accton Technology Corporation, Intel, Atheros Communications, Belkin International, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Nortel Networks, Nvidia Corporation, Oracle Corporation, SAP AG, Yahoo, Nokia, and the Consumer Electronics Association filed briefs in support of Buffalo's position that injunctive relief is inappropriate in this case.
    During the period of time that the injunction is in effect (10/1/2007), Buffalo cannot offer for sale, sell, import, or use its IEEE 802.11a and 802.11g compliant products in the United States. A list of the products covered by the injunction is attached here . The injunction does not prohibit sales of pre-existing inventories of products by Buffalo's customers. In addition, Buffalo has secured CSIRO's agreement to permit the replacement of defective products under warranty. None of Buffalo's other products are currently affected by this injunction.
    While Buffalo believes that it will be successful in reversing the district court's decision and will obtain a stay of the injunction pending a decision on the merits, the Court of Appeals has not yet issued a decision. Should the Court of Appeals issue a decision staying the injunction, you will be promptly notified. After the stay is issued or a favorable decision on the merits is obtained, Buffalo will be able to resume the supply of IEEE 802.11a and 802.11g products
    Please rest assured that Buffalo continues to stand behind their products and will continue to support all of our loyal customers as it relates to product warranties, technical support and the like without interruption.

    I suspect after reading the patent and the litigation that you mentioned above, that the US District Court decision will be reversed as the patent appears to be very vague in its contsruction and verbage. Furthermore, the intent to hold the IEEE hostage on the ratification of 802.11n will not bode well in the court's eyes. If in fact the case is reversed, I believe that the members of CSIRO will be in danger of lost profits litigation from Buffalo. Stay tuned to this bat channel.

  • I would like to replace my old AE 802.11g with new version 802./11n - How do I connect

    I have just bought a new Airport Express (802.11n wi-fi)  and would like to use it as the base station in place of the older version (802.11g).
    The old one to be used in another room connecting to my sound sytem as an extention to the new one.
    Both of these AEs  utilise different Aiport Utility (5.6 against 6.1).
    Can anyone please give me some detailed explanations of  how I can set-up these devices, if indeed they are possible.
    Alan

    Sorry, just to make sure: Do you want the older 802.11g Express just for iTunes streaming or (in addition) to extend the wireless range of the newer 802.11n Express? If it is the latter, you may want to reconsider doing so as the only way to extend with "mixed" base stations is with a Wireless Distribution System (WDS).
    A WDS has two major disadvantages: 1) It can only operate in the 802.11g radio mode, basically negating the advantage of your 802.11n Express, and 2) For every base station added to the WDS, the overall bandwidth is cut in half. So starting with 54 Mbps (for 802.11g), your extended wireless network will be running around 25-27 Mbps.

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