Airport Express 802.11n with Snow Leopard

Hello everybody.
I used my Airport alway's with iTunes in 10.5.8 and it worked fine. But now ik have my G5 upgraded with the new Snow Leopard 10.6.1 and now the connection won't work in iTunes 9.0.1(9). The computer sees the Airport and i can change the settings by the Airport configuration program, but when i try to connect it true iTunes it won't work??? If i try to select other speakers in iTunes it jumps back to computer? Please does somebody know's the answer to this???

But now ik have my G5 upgraded with the new Snow Leopard 10.6.1 and now the connection won't work in iTunes 9.0.1(9).
I'm curious on how you were able to upgrade your G5 computer with Snow Leopard as the minimum requirement for this OS is an Intel processor.

Similar Messages

  • HT1998 what is the latest update for Airport Express 802.11n with the Mac OSX10.6.8

    what is the latest update for Airport Express 802.11n with Mac OSX 10.6.8?

    You can find out as follows:
    Open Macintosh HD > Applications > Utilities > AirPort Utility
    Click the AirPort Express
    Click Manual Setup
    Click directly on the word Version (3rd line)
    If there are any updates, you will be notified.
    If there are not any updates, you have already have the latest firmware.

  • Airport express printing problem with Snow Leopard

    I am no longer able to print to my shared printer after upgrading to Snow Leopard. I get a message that starts with "communication failure the computer is no longer able to communicate with your printer". My network consists of a dual-band Airport extreme and an Airport Express. The dual-band Airport Extreme creates the network and is connected to the internet. The printer (HP LaserJet 1012) is connected to the AirPort Express. The AirPort express joins the dual-band Airport extreme network for the sole purpose of turning the HP LaserJet 1012 into a shared wireless printer. Everything was working fine before the upgrade to Snow Leopard. When I connect the printer directly to my MAC via USB, it prints fine. I can "see" the printer fine through bonjour when it is connected to the AirPort express, but I get a failure whenever I try to print to it. I have tried plugging and unplugging the device. I have effectively redownloaded the print-driver by connecting the printer directly to my MAC. It sounds like a Snow Leopard bug. Any suggestions for a work-around? Thanks.

    I upgraded to Snow Leopard and had difficulties connecting to my HP Photosmart 7150 printer through Airport Express. Apple setup found a 3rd party printer driver by Gutenprint, which I downloaded and the printer works. But like it did under Leopard. Under the 10.5 OS, a print command would send a wake up signal to the HP, which automatically turned off after a period of idleness, and then print. Under 10.6, there is no wake up and I need to manually activate the printer. I went to the HP web site hoping to find a "new" driver for 10.6 and HP has posted a message saying it does not and will not be providing print driver for 10.6. It then has a long list of HP devices that cannot or will not print with Snow Leopard. So those with no-printing issues should check your model against the HP driver listing. I believe this is a neat way for HP to force Mac users who upgrade or install 10.6 to buy a new printer for which HP has a 10.6 driver. At least I can print and the only inconvenience that I can see if the lack of that wake up signal. My wife says it won't hurt me if I have to get up and walk to the room with the printer to turn it on!

  • How can use my Airport Express 802.11n with IOS X 10.9.4?

    I have two Airport Express unit (802.11n) used to connect my upstairs and downstairs HiFi amps to my music collection (On a Mac mini and on my MacBook).  I keep my software up to date and my Airport Express units have now lost connectivity with my updated computers.  They do not even appear in UTILITIES/AIRPORT UTILITY - so I cannot reconfigure.  I have tried pressing the reset button and have tried "Googling" it but have had no success.  Any suggestions would be gratefully received.

    Both say A1254 (I think)
    A1254 is not a model number for an AirPort Express, but if you meant to say A1264, that is an 802.11n model that is compatible with AirPort Utility on an iOS device and also the Mac running Mavericks (10.9.4).
    If you have pressed the reset button as you say above (held it in for 5-6 seconds or more), then the AirPort Express devices are reset back to factory default settings.
    When you open AirPort Utility on the Mac and click on Other Wi-Fi Devices, you should see the AirPort Express. Click on AirPort Express to start the setup process and follow the prompts.

  • Numerous problems with Airport Express 802.11n with DSL and extending WLAN

    Hi all,
    I have the following hardware:
    802.11b/g Airport Express with firmware 6.3
    802.11n Airport Express with firmware 7.3.2
    MacBook Pro
    iBook G4
    Mac Pro PowerMac 2x450 G4
    Up until now I had been using the old Airport Express as the base station connecting to my PPPoE DSL line, and it worked fine. I wanted to extend the range of this network, and got another newer Airport Express, the 802.11n model.
    First I tried to use the 802.11n to connect to the Internet and the old one to extend the network. Turns out the old one can't be used to extend a network, which is bad enough, but the 802.11n one refuses to connect via DSL for more than a couple minutes, then drops the Internet connection.
    So I tried downgrading the firmware to 7.3.0 and 7.3.1, but it didn't help. Did a hard reset, factory default reset, soft reset, nothing worked.
    Next I tried swapping the two, putting the old Express back on the DSL line and the new one as the bridge to extend the network (using WPA2). But the 802.11n complains that it can't access the network and flashes amber.
    Again, tried upgrading to 7.3.2, downgrading to 7.3.1 and 7.3.0, hard reset, soft reset. Nothing works.
    Any ideas?
    Cheers,
    Fairfax71

    I don't see any option in the Airport Admin Utility for the old Express for creating a WDS network, only to participate in one...?
    That is the option you want to choose.
    You could use the newer AirPort Utility to configure the older AX.
    Sorry, forgot to ask something else: The 802.11n Express is able to join the WLAN created by the 802.11b/g Express as a client, but not extend it, is that what you're saying?
    No. If you join the network the AX is simply acting as another wireless client and is not extending the network. The "extend" option is not available since the older AX is not 802.11n capable. You must use WDS.
    Use AirPort Utiity and follow these steps for both AX's. To set up the main AX:
    Click the AirPort status menu in the menu bar and choose the wireless network created by the base station you want to set up as the main base station.
    Open AirPort Utility (located in the Utilities folder in the Applications folder on a Mac, or in Start > All Programs > AirPort on a Windows computer). Select the main base station, and choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open the configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary. If the base station is using the default password of public, you will not be prompted for a password.
    Click the Wireless button, and then choose “Participate in a WDS network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu.
    Click WDS and then choose “WDS main” from the WDS Mode pop-up menu.
    Select the “Allow wireless clients” checkbox if you want client computers to connect to this base station.
    Click the Add button and enter the MAC address of the base stations you want to connect to this base station. If there is a base station listed that you’d like to remove from the list, select the base station and click the Delete (–) button.
    Click Update to send the new settings to the base stations in the WDS. By default, the “Allow wireless clients” checkbox is selected. If you deselect the checkbox, and later want to change the settings on the base station, you must connect to the base station’s LAN port with an Ethernet cable. You will not be able to connect to the base station wirelessly.
    To set up the second AX to connect to the main AX:
    Open AirPort Utility. Select the AX, and choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu. Enter the base station password, if necessary. If the base station is using the default password of public, you will not be prompted for a password.
    Enter the same network password as the main base station, if necessary.
    Click the AirPort button, and then click Wireless. Choose “Participate in a WDS network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and choose the same channel as the main base station from the Channel pop-up menu.
    Click WDS and choose “WDS remote” from the pop-up menu.
    Enter the MAC address of the main base station in the WDS Main field. The MAC address is also referred to as the AirPort ID and is printed on the label on the bottom of the base station.
    Click Update to transfer the settings to the base station.
    This can be found on page 42 of "Designing AirPort Networks Using AirPort Utility" (direct PDF download).

  • Speed issue with TC and Airport Express 802.11n in WDS mode...

    Here is my problem.
    I replaced my older base station / Express duo with
    a new Time Capsule (1TB) and a new Airport Express (802.11n).
    I set up the network with the TC as base station running a WDS network (WDS main) and the Express is the WDS remote.
    When I check the wireless clients from the TC, I find my iMac running at 130Mbits and the Extreme at 54Mbits.
    No other wireless clients are connected to the network (I kept my slower network as a parallel one for my "older" Macs).
    The only other connected device is my Dish network DVR that is connected via an Ethernet cable directly to the Express.
    So my question is why does the Express not communicate at >54 speed rate with the TC?
    And, why does my iMac connect with 130 and not with 300Mbits?
    Any thoughts?

    Instead of using WDS, you should take advantage of the "Allow this network to be extended" option that is available for the 802.11n AirPorts including the TC. WDS only operates in the 802.11g radio mode.
    Here's the basic setup:
    o If practical, place the base stations in near proximity to each other during the setup phase. Once done, move them to their desired locations.
    o Open AirPort Utility and select the base station that will connect to the Internet.
    o Choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open the configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
    o Click AirPort in the toolbar, and then click Wireless.
    o Choose “Create a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then select the “Allow this network to be extended” checkbox.
    o Next, select the base station that will extend this network, and choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open its configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
    o Choose “Extend a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then choose the network you want to extend from the Network Name pop-up menu.
    o Enter the base station network and base station password is necessary.
    o Click Update to update the base station with new network settings.
    (ref: Page 46 of "Designing AirPort Networks Using AirPort Utility).

  • Speed issue with WDS, Airport Extreme, and Airport Express 802.11n

    I have a Airport network set up using WDS and two airport base stations: an Airport Extreme 802.11n, and an Airport Express 802.11n. The Extreme is configured to be WDS main and is connected to my cable modem and other computers, while the express is WDS relay and acts as a switch.
    I don't actually have any wireless clients connecting to the express. I'm using it to connect a mac with no airport card to the network by plugging it into the ethernet port on the express. For the most part, it works, and the mac gets a network address and can access the network. However, the connection speed from the Express to the Extreme seems slower than it should be.
    Since both are 802.11n, and the Mac is plugged into the Express's 10/100 ethernet port, I figure the theoretical top speed that the Mac should be able to communicate with another device plugged into the Extreme is at around the same speeds as 100 mbps ethernet, since the 100 mbps ethernet connection should be the bottleneck in this case. In reality, the speeds are much slower: when I transfer files between a machine connected to the extreme (via ethernet) and my mac, the speed tops out at about 2 megabytes a second, if that.
    I looked in the Airport Extreme's logs, and it indicates that the Express is only connected at 54 mbps, as though it were a 802.11g Express. I have no idea why this is! Also, the only wireless communication is between the Extreme and the Express, so one wireless device acting as a relay for another (and thus cutting the throughput in half) shouldn't be an issue.
    Does anyone know why the speeds are so slow, and if there's anything I can do to improve them?

    Hello Brian Kendall. Welcome to the Apple Discussions!
    I looked in the Airport Extreme's logs, and it indicates that the Express is only connected at 54 mbps, as though it were a 802.11g Express. I have no idea why this is!
    That is because you established a WDS which only runs in 802.11g. Since you have two 802.11n base station, you would want to take advantage of the "Extend a network" feature available with these base stations.
    Here's a typical setup:
    o If practical, place the base stations in near proximity to each other during the setup phase. Once done, move them to their desired locations.
    o Open AirPort Utility and select the base station that will connect to the Internet.
    o Choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open the configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
    o Click AirPort in the toolbar, and then click Wireless.
    o Choose “Create a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then select the “Allow this network to be extended” checkbox.
    o Next, select the base station that will extend this network, and choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open its configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
    o Choose “Extend a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then choose the network you want to extend from the Network Name pop-up menu.
    o Enter the base station network and base station password is necessary.
    o Click Update to update the base station with new network settings.
    (ref: Page 46 of "Designing AirPort Networks Using AirPort Utility.)

  • Extending range of Linksys WRT310N router with Airport Express 802.11n

    I am trying to extend the range of an existing wireless network set up with a WRT310N router with an Airport Express 802.11n - I've tried choosing both "Participate in a WDS network" and "Extend a wireless network" and both have run into problems.
    Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
    Thanks, Amy

    amysinsh, Welcome to the discussion area!
    Sorry but this is not possible.
    It would be possible if the wireless network was created by another AirPort Express (AX), anAirPort Extreme base station (AEBS), or a Time Capsule.

  • Does airport extreme 802.11a/c work with airport express 802.11n

    does airport extreme 802.11a/c work with airport express 802.11n

    "You can use the AirPort Express to extend the signal provided by the new AirPort, but the Express will not extend "ac" wireless since it does not have that capability. The Express will extend an "n" wireless signal if that helps."
    This is what I am trying to understand.
    So AXTRM w/ sep SSID for 2.4 (b/g/n) - call it SSID1 - and 5GHz (ac) call it SSID2 - WiFi Explorer confirms AC mode on 5G.
    Using an AXPRESS to extend - I have the option of SSID1 b/g/n *and* the 5GHz ac SSID2 in the pulldown (it sees both?) --> if I select SSID1, it also extends this same SSID in 5GHz (both showing b/g/n) >> so I now have 3 signals on SSID1 (XTRM 2.4G, XPRS 2.4G and XPRS 5G) b/g/n and one signal on SSID2 (XTRM 5G AC) ac
    If I select the 5Ghz ac SSID2 to extend - it prompts me "do you also want to extend (the 2.4GHz SSID1)?" --> select yes and I now have 2 signals for SSID (XTRM 2.4G & XPRS 2.4G) b/g/n and 2 signals on SSID2 (XTRM 5G 802.11ac & XPRS 5G 802.11 a//n)
    Is the 5G SSID2 actually being extended from the Airport Extreme to the Express?
    The reason I bring this up is I am having a lot of issues since iOS8 came out (especially on iPhone 6). Everything I am reading is pointing to when people have 2 AP's set to use the same SSID. When you walk to a part of the house where 5G 802.11 ac signal marginalizes, the phone does not immediately hand over to the 5G 802.11 a/n Airport Express.
    My thought was separate the SSID's but to me, if the Express can't extend 5Ghz from the Extreme, it's taking a step backwards. I am better off getting a more powerful router like an ASUS and going with one AP, drop the WiFi roaming altogether
    Any thoughts?

  • Cannot Connect Airport Express 802.11n to WEP 64 Bit Wireless Network

    I am currently use a Netgear MR814 who's only built in security is WEP 64bit.
    I am attempting to connect my Airport Express 802.11n to it and I see the WEP 40 bit option and use that and it puts in my password for the wireless as 0xPASSWORD.
    However it is unable to connect to the network. I scoured these forums and attempted the "$" escape character and the "" option by none of these work.
    Is there a way for me to configure my AE to be able to connect to my (older) wiresless router?

    I found information indicating that this airport express must be set up by airport utility 5.6.1, but that version is not supported by Lion.
    AirPort Utility 5.6.1 is not supported by Lion....it was designed for Snow Leopard.
    You need the correct version of  AirPort Utility 5.6 for Mac OS X Lion
    Give the correct version a try and then please report on your results.

  • Unable to Connect Using New AirPort Express 802.11n

    My mom purchased an AirPort Express 802.11n wireless router (AX) and I, as the designated "technology guru", was tasked with setting it up. Unfortunately, I am having problems out of the box.
    When I connect it to the wall, it is found by AirPort Utility, but when I try to set it up, it is unable to connect to the wireless network. ("An error occurred joining the selected wireless network." "An error occurred, close the configuration window and try again.") This is annoying because I have an older AX and it was true to the "it just works" Apple mantra. It is also annoying because the error message has a comma splice.
    Feeling pretty proud of my "technology guru" title, I come here to see what I could be doing wrong. I try connecting the computer directly to the router via ethernet cable. With this, I am able to setup my wireless network. I am still not able to connect to it. Additionally, once the AX has been configured, the AirPort Utility can't find it.
    I tried updating firmware to 7.5.2. I've tried downgrading to 7.3.2. I've tried hard resets, soft resets. Every tip I could find I have tried. Please help. My self-confidence is wearing out.
    Is it time for a call to Apple or a visit to the Apple Store?

    Are you trying to configure the Express to "join" the wireless network?
    If yes, the message you are receiving is likely an indication that you do not have the correct security settings selected for the Express. Unless the security settings between the wireless router and Express match up exactly, the Express will display the error that "an error occurred, etc".
    The easiest way to confirm if you have this problem is temporarily set the main wireless router to "no security" and try to connect the Express that way. If you can connect, then you know that it is a security issue.
    Please tell us the exact setting for security that the wireless router there is using and we'll try to give you some more ideas.
    The Express will connect. It's just a matter of finding the right settings.
    Message was edited by: Bob Timmons

  • After setting up my brand new Airport Express 802.11n and accidentally using it to connect my iMac to the network...my iMac no longer connects through Ethernet?  Any ideas...I have tried everything without success!!

    I have been using Apple technology for about 10 years starting with 1st generation iPods and our house now includes a 5 year old iMac, all versions of iPods and touches, Apple TVs (both generations) and most recently an iPad 2.  I have always told family and friends that Apple technology just works.  Unfortunately that stopped today.  I bought a new Airport Express 802.11n to use for AirTunes around my new pool.  I set it up from my iMac and accidentally used it to connect my iMac to the network for a short time.  Now I can no longer connect the iMac to the network using a hard wired Ethernet cable.  I have tried resetting everything possible, from hubs to routers to the Mac itself and it just will not connect to the network through Ethernet any longer.  I am now a very frustrated Apple user especially when the support site says I can't use the fast path support because my product was manufactured 5 years ago...I just bought it at BestBuy yesterday.  All other computers and itechnology in the house are connecting via wifi and Ethernet without any issue except from my new iMac boat anchor.  Anybody who can help me???  Thanks

    John, thanks for the email so quickly.
    I too hope I haven't tried "everything" either but I am reasonably technical.  I had done what you suggested to do before but I did both again.
    Ethernet is yellow in the left side bar.  In the right pane it's status says Connected but then below it says "Ethernet has a self-assigned IP address and will not be able to connect to the Internet."
    I have tried the assist me menu and Network Status has Ethernet Green, Network settings Yellow, ISP Green, and Internet and Server Red and Failed for both.  I have turned things off and on, checked cables, deleted all locations and tried restting them up but to no avail.  I even disconnected everything and connected the mac directly into the cable modem itself and the thing still will not connect.
    Thoughts???

  • I'm trying to extend the range of an Airport Extreme 802.11g by adding an Airport Express 802.11n. I set the Express up to join the existing network, but it does not make any difference in the range of the network. What's wrong?

    I'm trying to extend the range of an Airport Extreme 802.11g by adding an Airport Express 802.11n. I set the Express up to join the existing network, but it does not make any difference in the range of the network. What's wrong?

    Let me see if I can help you with the basic WDS configuration steps:
    Note: To help facilitate the setup, temporarily connect the AXn directly to the AEBS LAN port using an Ethernet cable. Once the setup is complete, you can move the AXn to the desired location. For all configuration steps you will be using the AirPort Utility. Before starting, be sure to jot down the AppleIDs for both base stations.
    802.11g AirPort Extreme Base Station (AEBS) Configuration
    AirPort Utility > Select the AEBS > Manual Setup > Wireless tab
    Wireless Mode: Participate in a WDS network
    Manual Setup > WDS tab
    WDS Mode: WDS main
    Allow wireless clients (checked)
    WDS Remotes: <enter the AppleID for the AXn here>
    Click on Update and allow the base station to restart.
    802.11n AirPort Express Base Station (AXn) Configuration
    AirPort Utility > Select the AXn > Manual Setup > Wireless tab
    Wireless Mode: Participate in a WDS network (Note: You may have to hold down the Option (Mac) or Control (PC) key to see this option in the list.)
    Manual Setup > WDS tab
    WDS Mode: WDS remote
    Allow wireless clients (checked)
    WDS Main: <enter the AppleID for the AEBS here>
    Click on Update and allow the base station to restart.

  • Airport Express 802.11n problem

    I have an Airport Express 802.11n.
    I use it to send iTunes from my mac on my stereo system in the adjacent room, via my wireless network. I don't use it all that often. It has worked fine over the two or so years I've had it
    A couple of weeks ago I had a new BT Home Hub 5 installed, this may be just a coincidence but I tried to use my Airport Express 802.11n yesterday with no luck. All I get is an amber flashing light. I've plugged the Airport Express 802 into the mains right next to my imac but that has not helped. My Airport Utility doesn't find or show my Airport Express.
    What do I do? Can anyone help?
    Hopefully
    Rob

    Here's an update:-
    By re-setting my Airport Express 802 and updating the firmware, I can now get it to work when connected with an ethernet cable and changing my settings from DHCP to Bridge.
    However, I still can't get it to work wirelessly.
    Is this a known problem with the BT Home Hub 5 and BT Infinity?

  • Airport Express 802.11n on third party network

    Hi,
    I've got an 802.11g wireless network with one older Airport Express 802.11g Base Station and a newly purchased Airport Express 802.11n Base Station. For some reason the new Base Station won't work properly on the 802.11g network. I can configure it from factory settings and it will connect to the network but as soon as I try to get it up and running with the older Base Station it disconnects and can't reconnect to the network. Is there anyway to configure the newer 802.11n (default) Base Station to boot with 802.11g as its default protocol?

    Did you set up the new AX in "Join a wireless network" mode? After you restart the AX, is there a steady green light on it? Can you see the AX on Airport Utility.
    If you are still having problem, try disable the security temporarily see if that is causing the problem.

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