Airport Extreme 802.11n Base Station blocking RealPlayer 11 completely

I am trying to play this radio station (just a brasillian sports channel) on RealPlayer 11:
rtsp://real.rbsonline.com.br/liverbs/*/broadcast/rdgaucha/gaucha.rm
Which is completely blocked on my Airport Extreme 802.11n Base Station with the latest firmware update.
It even blocks when RealPlayer is configured for HTTP only.
I am using it on my iMac which is connected directly via a ethernet cable instead of wifi to the Airport Extreme 802.11n Base Station.
RealPlayer can play it fine when I plug my iMac directly to the cable modem so it proves is the router. I never had RealPlayer issues before when I was using a linksys router.
It does really feel like Apple put an intentional block on RealPlayer to stop competition.
Anyone seen this issue? Guess it is related with the BBC RealPlayer issue.

Fixed myself, problem was because I setup OpenDNS on base station, removed it now works

Similar Messages

  • Is my AirPort Extreme (802.11n) Base Station defective?

    I'm trying to set up a wireless network with my new AirPort Extreme (802.11n) Base Station. I dismanteld my existing network that consisted of an old model AirPort Extreme and an AirPort Express. I can't seem to get anything to work properly with the new hardware. I have a G4 Quicksilver that uses an AirPort card. Is that the issue? I thought they were compatible. I was not able to update the Setup Utility because I don't have an Intel Mac. Still, that shouldn't prevent me from doing an initial setup. I'm thinking perhaps the unit is defective. I've been working on this several hours a day for almost a week. This is the most trouble (by far) that I've ever had with any Apple product. I'm really disappointed. I suspect the hardware is defective, but based on all of the issues I've read about in this forum, I think it could just be reflective of the poor overall quality of the new AirPort Extreme. What a let down.

    What is the exact name of the application you are using to configure the airport?
    You should be using "AirPort Utility"
    It is a Universal application, so it should work on both a PPC and Intel mac.
    As for the update, if you can't download it via software update, you most likely do not need it.
    The quicksilver only has an Airport card:
    http://support.apple.com/specs/powermac/PowerMac_G4_Quicksilver2002.html
    That means that you will need to configure the airport extreme N to operate in the 2.4 GHz range. You will need to tell it that it needs to be compatible with 802.11b
    There is probably an option for 802.11 b/g/n compatibility.
    Are you going to still use your airport express? you could either use WDS to extend your wireless network without connecting the two airport base stations with an ethernet cable... or you could connect them together with an ethernet cable and configure the same network name and use two different channels (only use 1, 6, or 11). If you extend a network, they both need to use the same channel.
    If the quicksilver is the only machine on your network, it will not be any faster.
    Actually, you could make things faster, now that I think about it... I am guessing that your quicksilver is not located near your airport extreme. If I am wrong, just ignore this...
    You could use one of your airports as your main base station, connected to your cable modem/dsl whatever... then you connect the other airports ethernet to your quicksilver. you then turn off the airport card in your quicksilver and set up the airport connected to your computer to use WDS and connect to the other airport using 802.11g.
    You now have gone from an 11 mbps max (5 mbps real world) connection to a real world 30-40 mbps link.
    Other options would be to look for 802.11g or 802.11n usb adapters for the quicksilver... I am not sure what is mac compatible out there, since it is probably a small market since it is built in to all new macs.
    Good luck

  • Notice Re: New Airport Extreme 802.11n Base

    About an hour ago, I got off the phone with Apple Support. They were very helpful in getting "phase one" of my installation going. But in the process WE both discovered that the new Airport Extreme Base Station (802.11n) I had bought from the Apple Store nearby contained: OLD versions of setup software and pdf manuals!
    I could not proceed to the final step (as we intended while on the phone) because I had just installed "v. 4.2" of the software and of course version 5 is needed.
    Checking the pdf manuals - I could plainly see the OLD "flying saucer" model base was being depicted and the instructions were for that model. It was "funny" because the Apple Support person asked a couple of times, "Is the base you have a square about 1-inch thick?"
    Of course, Support will send out word that there are some (who knows how many at this point) Airport Extreme Base Stations in stores (even Apple Stores) with obsolete software and documentation.
    I just thought I'd post this for those who have not yet bought an AE Base Station - be sure to check this before buying.
    My consequence are less happy: It's now Friday Aug. 31: It will take 5 business days for the replacement disk to arrive, next Monday is a US Holiday, which means I won't be able to complete my setup until week after next.

    Thanks Rajesh, I may do that but it seems a shame now that the Apple Support lady is sending me a copy. I think instead, I may call the local store and ask if they know of the problem, first.
    Because this Apple Store opened only about 5 weeks ago, I suspect this may be "new stock" which indicates that's all they'll have. Also, Apple Support said they'd notify the right parties - by which I think they mean their own and independent Apple retailers.
    Anyway, I wasn't posting the info as a question: I wanted to notifiy those who may be about to buy Airport Extreme for themselves. I did some checking before posting here and found no other notices of this problem. So I guess I've got a "scoop" and wanted to be first in spreading the news.
    I left out a good part of the whole story in my orignal post: what got me to Apple Support was that just connecting the base station (with ethernet cable) to computer knocked out my DSL service. I first called my ISP tech support and got that fixed. But such an easy procedure "backfiring" like that got me thinking, so I then went to Apple Support via phone. Only then did we discover I had the old version of the software. My "phase two" is just getting an eMac in the next room connected wirelessly - no big deal - so I may wait for that complimentary disk after all.
    One possibly related item: After I finished talking to Apple Support, almost at once, Mail.app went down. It turned out - the mail .plist had gotten corrupted. I trashed that and Mail came back -but then I had trouble connecting to the mail server and had to re-do password and so-on. Right now, I'm "back to normal" but suspect that installing the old Airport software (a second time) is what kicked Mail to it's knees. Sure was a heckuva coincidence if it wasn't that, I've never - never had trouble with any version of Mail.app until now.
    Message was edited by: macnoel

  • 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

  • Manual Static LAN IP address for 802.11n Base Station when using PPPoE

    We have a network of about 75 machines. We want to replace our main router with the new Airport Extreme 802.11n base station. WAN connection is PPPoE so we'd use the NAT function. All IP addresses of our machines on the LAN are statically assigned.
    Problem is our machines are assigned to find the router at a specific address: 192.168.0.254. The default base station IP in that subnet is 192.168.0.1. Is there any way to change the IP of the base station to 192.168.0.254 from the default of 192.168.0.1? We can do it if we have it join our existing LAN in bridge mode, but we want it to provide the main NAT functions AND connect to our ISP's PPPoE server WITHOUT having to change all our LAN devices to find it at 192.168.0.1. Possible?

    The HH will only show devices which use DHCP in the list of devices, unless you've set the device to use a static IP in the HH Home Network page.  It's a bit of a silly idea and IMO the software on the router is terrible, but you do it like this...
    - Set the printer to use DHCP to get an IP address.
    - Log in to the HomeHub 5 and browse to the Home Network page (http://192.168.1.254/index.cgi?active_page=9130)
    - Find the printer in the list of devices and click on it.
    - Click on 'Yes' next to the "Always use this IP address" option.
    - Set the IP address on the printer statically and update your devices to use the new IP address of the printer (if it changed from what it was before).
    That will ensure that the DHCP server in the HH5 doesn't lease the same IP to another device.  This will also allow you to see the printer in the list of devices.

  • Connecting AirPort Express to AirPort Extreme 802.11n

    The following steps helped me set up an AirPort Express base station connected to a set of wireless speakers with my new AirPort Extreme 802.11n base station. I’m posting this because the process was not entirely intuitive, at least not to me.
    I’ll assume you have set up the AP Extreme base station to connect to the internet and run your home network and that you are connected to your wireless network.
    Make sure you set-up the AP Extreme base station to broadcast in 802.11n + 802.11b/g modes, i.e. both at once. You will also have to check he setting that allows the newtork to be extended.
    Reset the AP Express base station so that in runs on the factory defaults by pressing the reset button with a paper clip. Wait for it to completely restart.
    Launch the AirPort Utility. You should see both your AP Extreme and AP Express base stations in the left hand column. Click on the AP Express base station you just reset. When it asks to switch wireless networks do so. Then hit continue.
    On the next screen select “Connect to my current wireless network” option and hit continue.
    On the following screen select the “Extend the range of my AirPort Extreme or AirPort Express network” and hit continue. Do NOT select the “Join my wireless network” option even though it says this is how you connect to wireless speakers. This is the part that was not obvious to me. When I tried this the AirPort Express base station flashed orange and wouldn’t connect despite waiting 30 minutes.
    Chose the network you wish to extend from the drop down menu. My keychain supplied the password for the network.
    Give your base station a name and hit continue.
    Select the main base station in the list provided. This is the one connected to the internet and hit ok.
    The Airport Utility software will configure the network to accept the AirPort Express base station.
    Now all that’s left is to connect your wireless speakers to the AirPort Exppress base station. You can now play music through AirTunes while being connected to your fast 802.11n network.

    I recently setup an Airport Express in conjuction with my Extreme Base Station. I'm not really understanding how this method enables 802.11n connection speeds (via Base Station) to the internet and also allow streaming music through the Express at 802.11b/g. It's my understanding that if you want to be able to access the internet AND stream music at the same time the Express needs to join the network. In order for the Express to join the network (able to recognize the Base Station)...the Base station needs to be changed from 802.11n only to 802.11n (802.11b/g compatable)....which essentially means your connecting to the internet at 802.11b/g. If your wanting to keep 802.11n only on the base station...you would have to create a seperate network via the Express to stream music. What this means is you CANNOT access the internet and stream music at the same time. You would have to manually change Airport in the taskbar to do one or the other.
    Am I off base here? If I am missing something please let me know...because it would be great to be able to connect to the internet at 802.11n only with a multi-case rate set to 23Mbps vs. the 11Mbps (maximum) of the 802.11b/g compatable option.
    I guess what is confusing me is that my setup is basically the same as what was described above..minus having the "Extended Network" being enabled. How does extending the network change things?

  • USB Printing AirPort Extreme 802.11n

    I've upgraded to the new AirPort Extreme 802.11n base station and am having troubles printing to printers that worked fine with my previous AirPort Extreme 802.11g base station.
    Both USB printers are detectable for set-up in the Print & Fax Preference tab and can be printed to when hooked directly to my computer. They are also detectable for set-up in the Print & Fax Preference tab when hooked via the base station.
    So, all set-up and settings are fine. The issue I am having which never occurred before is that the file is sent to the queue but is immediately labeled as stopped and will not print no matter what I try.
    I've configured, reconfigured, reset,you name it but with no luck.
    does anyone have any answers out there. Please help...

    I have had the same issue repeatedly after upgrading to Leopard. I can no longer use my printer (Brother HL-2070N the "network ready one") with my airport extreme router. It used to show up before I updated to 10.5.2, now I can't even get it to show up at all. I reset the base station, unplugged, and then re-plugged in the printer, nothing worked. Then I tried to just delete it from my list of printers and re-add it, but now my computer can't find it! I didn't change anything on my network at all, and I had literally printed something just 10 minutes before I applied the update. Very frustrating for a $180 router.

  • Installing Airport Extreme 802.11n card in eMac killed keyboard?

    Hello,
    I got an Airport Extreme 802.11n base station and card for my eMac (which I want to run in the next room from my new Mac Pro) from local Apple Store yesterday.
    I read and followed the card installation instructions exactly. - This included installing the software from the CD.* - But as soon as I installed the card, my mouse and keyboard lost contact with the eMac. (Totally unresponsive to key commands or mouse movement.)
    I shut down my eMac and my (new) Philips DSL modem: both of these have shown no symptoms up to the time of the card installation. I un-installed the card and waited 5-minutes. Modem and eMac came back normally and so did my keyboard and mouse.
    Just prior to installation, I ran DiskWarrior and Repair Permissions. Also: I unplugged and "re-plugged" the USB keyboard and mouse before shutting down of eMac & modem - this made no difference.
    * I did notice: The documentation for the base station says the eMac needs Airport Setup Assistant 5.2. The eMac has Airport Setup Assistant 4.2. Yet - when I ran the installation program, it recognized and reported as updated Airport Setup Assistant 4.2.
    Anyone have a solution to my loss of keyboard and mouse with card installed? Please - the Mac Pro arrives tomorrow.
    Message was edited by: macnoel

    I'm answering my own question:
    I got around to simply trying a second time to install the Airport Extreme card in this eMac. This time - I shut it down before starting installation of the card.
    I suspected that shutting down would be a good idea - since it seems very likely that the System needs to load whatever drivers or extensions are needed to enable Airport. But the instruction either did not mention shutting down before installing the card or I missed mention of it in my haste to complete this and numerous other tasks before day's end.
    Anyway - that seems to be what happened because bootup was normal and the mouse cursor and keyboard worked as soon as the desktop appeared.
    Now - I proceed to setup the base station and test it on the eMac. If all goes as I hope - in 36 hours I'll have both this old eMac and the new Mac Pro living happily in their separate rooms.

  • Speed issue with the AirPort Extreme (802.11n)

    Hi, I was wondering if anyone could help out with this.
    I am the Design Manager and IT Director at a publishing company where we have just upgraded to an AirPort Extreme (802.11n) base station to drive our network. We went this route as all of our machines are Mac Minis with built-in Airport and we were in a situation where re-doing a hardwire on the building was not going to be a possibility due to budget costs.
    Our new configuration seems to be running very well and has the following devices connected to the AirPort Extreme:
    Linksys Firewall Router (which was used on our old system and was requested by corporate to stay in the lineup to keep the static IP addresses we've already defined for our printers, VPN, etc. intact). The configuration on this part is modem to Linksys router to uplink port on the Airport).
    New Panther, Intel based Xserve connected to the Airport's Ethernet port 1.
    A 4 port ethernet switch connected to the Airport's Ethernet port 2 which drives four of our HP LaserJet printers.
    Ethernet port 3 is not occupied.
    All of the ethernet cords connecting our equipment are brand new.
    For the most part, everything's been running blazing fast with a remarkable speed increase over our old hardwired setup. However, I've received a few complaints about slow speeds when dragging and dropping and working with files that are stored on our Xserve - we get alot of the "spinning wheel" and the transmission speeds seem very slow.
    At present, we have several category 6 ethernet cords on backorder. I was planning on using one to take advantage of the gigabit ethernet capabilities between the Airport and the Xserve (as these are the only two elements of the network that support gigabit ethernet, besides the majority of our Mac Minis. Printers and cable modem are only 10-100 capable, so those will stand as is).
    Can anyone tell me if the gigabit ethernet cord will be the solution to this one slow aspect of the new network? Any other settings I could apply to possibly speed up the transmission time when moving files to and from our server? Good news is that every workstation in the house is getting a full 4 bars.
    Many thanks!

    PS, just wanted to point out that we are also running in bridge mode.
    Thanks!

  • Airport Extreme 802.11n still in shrinkwrap -- should I return it unopened?

    I just bought one of the new Airport Extreme 802.11n base stations today and haven't even had time to take it out of the shrinkwrap yet. Based on what I'm reading in this forum...I'm torn about what to do. Should I take it back unopened, or should I hang onto it, pray for no problems, and/or hope for fixes?
    I had bought it primarily for the disk/print sharing features, but also to potentially take advantage of the draft-n speeds in the future. Since everything I own right now is g-only (Core Duo MacBook Pro, Airport Express hooked to my home theater, PSP, PC laptop from work), I'd be using the new AEBS only for 802.11g in the short term. However, I'd assume that ExpressCard/34 802.11n cards will come out at some point, enabling me to move to a mixed g/n network in the future.
    The critical thing for me is a decent assurance that the router would work well in a g-only configuration since a friend is waiting to buy my old router. Is anyone trying to use the new AEBS in this way? If so, does it perform well, or are you seeing the same problems that the 802.11n users are seeing?

    Ask yourself a question.
    How fast is your internet connection?
    If it is is 1-2-8 mb speed then you dont need 'n'.
    If you transfer personal info between computers fast speeds allowed up to 54 will save you time.
    'n' is to provide greater range like Mimo and increased transfer speeds.
    But do you really need it?
    No,if you dont transfer huge data,
    Yes, if you want to transfer (stream video from your iTV from Mac if you spend most of your day in front of TV.
    There is no substitute for a good reliable connection.
    In my real world experience because I only have a 8mb ADSL connection 'g' is not the strongest and most reliable scenario to use. During the last airport update my last 3 years of uninterrupted airport connections mixed PC and Macs on WDS set up went belly up and I had posted my thoughts as well with the relevant results and now set up is fine. But at a price.
    Downgraded to all on 'b' and now use my Draytek Vigor 2800VG and have AEBS put away in storage.
    My signal and range is out of this world. When I decide that I have enough free time to sit in front of a TV and download movies and watch them when I have nothing better to do such as travel the world etc. etc., that is the time I will go for speed...or will I.
    Dont get bamboozled by the hype. If you really want one wait for a year then decide. Let others solve the teething problems as is there want.

  • AirPort Extreme 802.11n and PowerBooks?

    I am about 1.5 seconds away from buying one of the new AirPort Extreme 802.11n base stations to work with my AirPort Express but I have some questions / concerns.
    1) Is my Powerbook capable of being enabled to access an "n based network" or is my money wasted on a router capable of speeds my computer can not access?
    2) Should my computer be capable of accessing this network, is the Airport Express Base Station I have capable of acting on this network in "N speed" too? I know the base station can be configured to act essentially as a relay to boost signal strength...if set up to do so will it dumb the speed down to "G speed"?
    3) If 1 and 2 are true and the express base station dumbs the speed of the N router down, can I configure the airport express base station to ONLY act as a wireless conection to my stereo and not as a wireless router, so as to allow my Powerbook to access the "N" speed network but still broadcast my music wirelessly to the stereo?
    Many thanks...I wish they just made this information clearer on pages like this:
    http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/EducationIndividualCanadaCustom .woa/9804006/wa/PSLID?mco=F7D93AEF&nplm=D4141ZM/A&wosid=gE4h0LIBbghZ2sXpLP21Wij0 uPJ

    Hey for any one still lookin....
    1. It all depends on what your CARD is capable of. Your POWERBOOK is more then capable of "N" speeds. Your only limited on the bandwidth of the Cardbus slot. You would have to have a third party card to access the new "N" speeds tho. I'm not sure if the last batch of (pre MacBooks) Powerbooks even made it to the "G" standard. I know Apple just came out with a driver for the latest Macs that have an upgradeable Card and or Basestation to get to "N". I really don't think your Express is upgradeable.
    2. You need to look at what models you have to figure out what their capable of. You should be able to go to Apple's web site to find out. Usually the Router will Dumb it down to the SLOWEST speed. Unless you were streaming your music, and playing a game online, and transferring a large file you shouldn't have a problem anyway. As long as you are not using the slowest product it won't dumb down.
    3. Haven't got that far yet. I've used up all my brain cells getting this far, so good luck on your mission. Try starting another string with specifics on what you want to do.

  • Trouble installing new AirPort Extreme (802.11n)

    I just purchased the AirPort Extreme 802.11n base station. When I first turned on the AirPort Extreme base station the AirPort Utility program on my Mac recognized it immediately. I followed the instructions to configure it and everything seemed to be OK (green light is glowing on the base station). That said, now my Mac (AirPort Utility) no longer recognizes the base station. Any ideas what could be causing this problem or where I can go for help?

    Did this problem with Airport Utility not "seeing" your base station happen immediately after configuring the device? Or has everything been working fine for days or months, and you noticed just now that the Airport Utility cannot see the base station.
    Also - are you absolutely certain your Mac is wirelessly connected to your base station, and not the unsecured wireless network of one of your neighbors?

  • Airport Extreme 802.11n + NetGear WGR614

    Just got new AirPort Extreme 802.11n base station and have it set up fine with my iMac and Apple TV.
    I had planned to continue to use my existing Netgear WGR614 as an 802.11g access point so that when I connect my iPhone I do not degrade the speed of the AirPort's 802.11n.
    I have managed to do this in a rudimentary fashion but what I really want to do is get the Netgear and the AirPort onto the same subnet even though they are broadcasting different signals - does this make sense?
    When I connect my iPhone to the g router it of course can't see anything connected to the AirPort via Bonjour so no iPhone Remote...
    Can somebody direct me to some assistance with this issue?

    Oh nevermind - a little more searching and I found this great article from NetGear:
    http://kbserver.netgear.com/kbwebfiles/n101496.asp
    Still a bit confusing but I followed it and it works.

  • Airport Express and Airport Extreme 802.11n

    Hello,
    I have a Airport Extreme 802.11n Base Station set up and a old Airport Extreme (the one before the 802.11n model) set up which extends the Base Station's signal.
    Is the old Airport Express broadcasting the 802.11n put out by the Airport Extreme even though the Express is an older model?
    Thanks!

    No, the older AX (Airport Express) is not capable of communicating in 802.11n protocol. It would be 802.11g at best.

  • Speed or Performance Issue with Airport Extreme 802.11n

    Background:
    Router 1: Linksys Wireless G 2.4GHz Router WRT54G (have been using for 1.5 years)
    Router 2: Airport Extreme 802.11n Base Station Model: A1143 (just arrived)
    Macs: Intel MacBook Pro & MacBook both Newtwork Adapters upgraded to 802.11 a/b/g/n and verified via "Netwrok Utility". The Netwrok Utility also displays the link speed at 54 mb under interface info. when the Linksys G router is selected and the link speed at 144 mb when the airport extreme n is selected.
    Observation & Issue:
    Currently, for testing both network routers have been used seperatly (connected directly via the cable modem) and speeds for each latop verified via http://www.speakeasy.net/speedtest/ and normal "human" usage web surfing observations via Safari. Results below:
    1. When using the Linksys G router both the MacBook and MacBook Pro appear to be performing well and responsive with little or no wait on graphically/media intense sites such as apple.com
    The speakeast.net/speedtest/ (using the NYC hub close by) downoad test displays 8MB to 10MB speeds
    2. On the otherhand, when using the Airpot extreme both the MacBook and MacBook Pro appear to be performing slower than usual with higher waits for image and page downloads.
    In addition, the speakeast.net/speedtest/ (using the NYC hub close by) downoad test displays 2MB to 3MB speeds. Lower than what we experienced using the older router.
    Request for advide or help:
    1) Is this normal? Assuming it is not, what esle can I look at that can help me determine the root cause. The Airport Utility does not offer much assistance in this matter.
    2) Thus far I have opted to revert back to my Linksys g router. However, before returning the product... any other adivce on a potential miss in the configuration or setup would be of great help.
    3) Other's experiencing the same?
    MacBook Intel & MacBook Pro Intel   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   SUing Comcast Cable Modem

    Contacted Apple Support (have an AppleCare account) tonight and the issue has been resolved with the caveat that I cannot have a mixed (g & n) radio mode on the same airport extreme base without significant loss of performance. These are the steps I was walked through to resolve my particular case:
    1) Verify that your hardware is indeed upgraded to use n (see steps in my original post)
    2) Open the AirPort Utility (new program that was installed from the install disc under applications/utility)
    3) Click on the Airport Extreme image on the right hand column to open the Airport Extreme settings
    4) Select the "Wireless" tab, then "Radio Mode" drop down and select 802.11n only (5 GHz)
    5) Select Update to apply new settings.
    Results:
    When running the speakeasy.net/speedtest I am seeing results that are indeed better. However, the test shows that the top speed lowers a bit and jumps back up unlike when I am on my old g router, which does not have such a jump.
    This test is not perfect but a good gauge. If anyone has any other ideas to test performance more accurately, please do let me know.
    Note: Only n enabled devices now work with the n router. I will keep my old g router as a backup and for my work pc laptop.
    Hope the above helps and thanks.
    MacBook Intel & MacBook Pro Intel   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

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