Bent Aluminum Around Ethernet Port. Fix?

I recently dropped my phone (less than 1 foot drop) on the side of my MacBook Pro and was surprised to learn that the aluminum on top of the Ethernet port was bent (a noticeable bend). I am wondering what are my options about fixing this cosmetic problem?

The best option if the damage is purely cosmetic is to ignore it. If you need to get it fixed in order to use your ethernet port, you'll have to pay for a new top case, to the tune of several hundred dollars.

Similar Messages

  • Is there a fix for a dead ethernet port besides a new logic board?

    My ethernet port went dead on my IMac.  I unplugged the ethernet cable and plugged it into my laptop and it worked instantly.  I am still able to connect wirelessly.  I bought an apple USB to Ethernet converter and plugged it in.  It worked for about 3 days and then it went dead.  Once again I was able to unplug the ethernet cable, plug it into my laptop and instantly had a connection.  Is there a fix for a dead ethernet port besides a new logic board and if not how do I figure out which logic board I need?
    Thanks
    Step

    This problem baffled me. I kept getting the "ethernet cable unplugged" error after testing my cables good. Was abut to write it off as port gone bad when I found this thread.
    The YouTube video reference above fixed my problem. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1P6X87qArs)
    Basically go to SETTINGS/NETWORK. Then highlight your ETHERNET port and click the ADVANCED button. From there click the HARDWARE tab.
    Set
    CONFIGURE to MANUALLY
    SPEED to whatever your ethernet speed is, in my case 1000baseT
    DUPLEX - FULL DUPLEX, FLOW CONTROL
    Leave MTU at Standard
    Hit OK.
    Then don't forget to hit APPLY. I didn't do this the first couple of times assuming hitting OK applied these settings. You gotta hit APPLY.
    In about two seconds, my Ethernet connected again.
    I went back and reset it to AUTOMATIC just to test and after doing so got the cable unplugged error again. So I am leaving it on manual and it's working.

  • Can i configure each ethernet port to fixed and auto ip adresses?

    Hi, i will be using a SSL Matrix Controller with Logic 9. This connects thru ethernet and requires a FIXED address. However, this Mac also needs to connect to the internet which doesnt use a fixed a address. Can I keep port one the way it is, and configure port two as fixed and have them both work properly? Are they completely independent of each ther?
    Thx

    Do you use a Router that you control?
    If so, you can have fixed addresses easily -- just assign an address Manually that is in the same range, but above or below the ones your Router is likely to pass out automatically.
    You can also assign a manual address to the second Ethernet port, but using it this way is complex. What does the device maker recommend?

  • RT: How do I use two independen​t Ethernet ports?

    I have looked around at the forums and seems like no one has had a real solid answer or example on how to use 2 Ethernet ports with RT.
    Right now I have two connections configured on the RT:
    Primary Connection:
    IP:192.168.2.181
    Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
    Gateway: 192.168.1.1
    DNS Server: 192.168.1.1
    Secondary Connection:
    IP:192.168.1.180
    Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
    Gateway: 192.168.1.1
    DNS Server: 192.168.1.1
    After using this initial setup, I made a RT project where I used 'UDP Open' for both 192.168.2.181 and 192.168.1.180, and had them both read and write in a sequence (Read and Write for the 2.181 connection, then Read/Write for 1.180).
    The computer I'm using to send the data is connected to a switch, which in turn is connected to the RT. Both the RT and my host computer have 2 ports, one of them with ports configured to be 192.168.2.x and 192.168.1.x
    Using this configuration I get some weird results:
    If I send a packet to 192.168.2.181, I receive it from the UDP Receive vi that has an input connection from my UDP Open assigned to 1.180. I also receive the data the same way when sending packets to 1.180 (as expected). Basicly, no matter what IP I'm sending it to on the RT, the data from either packet will arrive from the same location/vi.
    Why is this? Is there anyway to fix this? Did I not configure something correctly?
    Does anyone have an example of dual Ethernet ports actually working with LabView RT?
    I tried checking out "KnowledgeBase 3VQ6278T: Can I Use Multiple Network Adapters in a PXI or Desktop Real-Time System?", but after following the link to the page, I get:
    "Error You are not authorized to view this document". Can any NI people look into this?
    Having to make two IPs with different subnet masks obviously just makes things unnecessarily complicated. Can anyone tell me why LabView/NI did this? I know for a fact this isn't a limitation in hardware.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated, thanks!

    Hey Weizbox.
    Sorry to hear you're having such a difficult time using multiple ethernet devices with RT. 
    Let me go ahead and get the easy stuff out of the way, the link you
    have is dead because it's archived (and thus removed forever) though
    unfortunately the link on ni.com wasn't corrected to point to the
    following resource, which the KB was a word-for-word duplication of
    (which is supposedly why it was removed):
        http://zone.ni.com/reference/en-XX/help/370622C-01​/lvrthelp/configuringdual/
    Unfortunately, though, it's much less useful than it sounds.
    Before you start feeling like a woodpecker in a petrified forest, lemme
    fill you in on why the requirement is there for the two ethernet NICs
    to be on seperate subnets.  Simple enough, it has to do with the
    network stack on both of the operating systems used for LabVIEW
    Real-Time - however, the same falls true for even Windows (without
    using fancy vendor-specific drivers), so let's not be too hasty. 
    Neither PharLap ETS nor VxWorks, the two OS's used under the hood,
    support redundant network ports.  Because of this, if you give two (or
    more in the case of PXI and RT Desktop) ethernet devices IP addresses
    on the same subnet the routing tables in the network stack get horribly
    confused and literally cannot resolve the proper adapter, which either
    brings down the ethernet on the entire system or makes it such that one
    or more network adapters becomes useless and one adapter takes over all
    network traffic (there's no way to predict which adapter that will be,
    nor can you control it based on what's plugged in and what's not).  On
    Windows this is handled by bridging the adapters, but RT does not yet
    support bridging (that opens a whole nother can of worms).  Long story
    short, you still wouldn't be able to give both NICs individual IP
    addresses on the same subnet. 
    Let's take that even one more step.  You cannot simply just assign both
    ethernet NICs different IP addresses on "virtual" subnets, you actually
    need to put both NICs on literally different subnets for the network
    routing to actually work.  Multiple ethernet devices for LabVIEW RT
    were designed with the following mantra in mind - "The FIRST ethernet
    device is designed for a TCP/IP network, the SECOND and SUBSEQUENT
    ethernet device is designed for OTHER protocol uses."  By "OTHER
    protocol uses" I mean the second NIC should be used for RT
    Deterministic Ethernet (PXI, RT Desktop, et. al.), direct connections
    with other targets, and 3rd party or custom ethernet protocols. 
    Now, realistically, we can't expect users to not use the second NIC for
    TCP/IP use, nor should we.  However, if you ARE going to use TCP/IP on
    the second NIC, you should only use the second NIC for connecting to an
    unroutable network in the eyes of the first NIC.  So, for instance, the
    FIRST NIC can have an IP address of 10.0.62.128, but the SECOND NIC
    would need to have an IP address on 192.168.100.23  - and the
    10.0.62.128 should not be able to route a TCP packet to the 192.168.x.x
    network, and vice versa.  In your example I noticed that both networks
    used the same Gateway - unless your Gateway is configured to identify
    and seperate the two networks, it's not going to end well, and you
    shouldn't expect to be able to send data from one NIC to the other NIC
    (at least with what you know now).  To reiterate, using multiple NICs
    using TCP/IP should only be done in cases where you've got (n-1)
    isolated subnets, where n is the number of NICs you have using TCP/IP. 
    A classic example of this is a command-based measurement environment;
    the RT system uses the FIRST NIC to talk to a TCP/IP network, in order
    to transfer data or provide status to a network, and the second NIC is
    connected to a TCP/IP network designed specifically for measurement or
    control, where one node sends commands to a single or multiple nodes on
    the network at once to perform tasks (like "Take a Measurement", "Stop
    a motor", "Bake me a Pie", etc...).  The isolated TCP/IP subnet is free
    from "random" TCP/IP traffic (especially system announcement
    broadcasts) and can have whatever topology/configuration it wants.  The
    dual networking allows the RT system to work/communicate/perform on
    both networks.
    I hope this helps shed some light on your situation.
    Cheers!
    -Danny

  • My ethernet port is not working

    I recently had my macbook sent into the store to repair a bad logic board (fried in a thunderstorm) and over the past month I have noticed that my ethernet port wasn't working. Before the storms our router was acting up so I figured our maintenance was working. When I noticed the bandwidth slowing I checked my ethernet connection only to find I have been using wireless this whole time.
    Now I'm not sure if the apple store technicians (it was actually shipped off site to be repaired) checked the ethernet port when I last sent it in because from my knowledge it was working before the storm and I had never checked it afterwards.. I really don't want to be charged another $200 to fix a problem that could have been fixed during the same time as my previous work order.
    I also had a bad experience with their timely service, my macbook was there for about a week and a half with no progress on anything when it was supposed to be shipped off site and when it finally was shipped off site it took a matter of two days to be fixed. That would have been two weeks less than my month turn over for this repair.
    Any help or suggestions on what I should do and how I should approach the apple store? I really do not want a repeat and cannot afford to turn my macbook taken from me as it is being used for my current job.
    P.S. I have singled the ethernet port to my computer as I had used my dad's macbook on the same ethernet cord and his worked, mine did not.

    I have updated my computer this morning, it didn't change anything regarding the ethernet port. I also logged onto my windows through bootcamp and ran ipconfig. When I look into the ethernet option it says "media disconnected" could this mean the port is simply loose? or would there be a different sentence there if it was actually damaged. When I went under profiler though it did not say no ethernet ports are found but just listed off the usual numbers.
    I'm tempted to reset my SMC but I want to make sure it will have no side effects on my computer, I really hope I can talk to the apple store because I'm really sick of their service to me.
    I'm going to ramble for a bit but I feel like I got taken advantage of because I cannot be pushy or rude to others even in inconvenience. It was ~$100 for the repair service which isn't terrible and ~$130 for a new logic board togehter I ended up paying just under $300 for the complete repair which on it's own is not horrible either. However my computer was stuck in their system for a little over a month, it took 1 week to get the diagnosis which from there it should have been shipped off site to be repaired (and if followed how much time it took later on I would have been two days until I had my computer back) however every time I checked the status and called in the genius' replied it has been shipped off site so the status will not update until a repair has been finished. after a week of bombarding people at the apple store with phone calls asking how my computer is doing I finally got a call saying "it has been a week since we have heard from you about your computer, would you like for it to be repaired?". This was unbelievable all of my phone calls did not go through (was around 20 or so multiple ones in a day) and I wasted a week just to find my computer was basically lost in their store. Finally it was shipped off and repaired and sent back to me. When I brought this up to the manager in store she simply stated that there was no confirmation to repair the computer until I answered that phone call over a week later, which is absolutely ridiculous.
    I received no other help from that point and ended up paying the full bill (which wasn't my purpose but still..) and I refuse to be treated like that again when it was supposed to be a somewhat simple procedure.
    end rant.
    Anyway, I really hope this works because I do not feel like repeating this event nor paying another ~100 service fee for something that could have been repaired during the same time.

  • Ethernet port is erratic

    When I try plugging in an ethernet cable to my ethernet port, it generally doesn't work. Sometimes I can move it around a little while simultaneously pressing refresh on my browser, and it will work... but this isn't very often. This was the case a few months ago, but lately I can't get it to work at all.
    Is this something AppleCare will cover?

    The way you describe the problem, pressing the browser refresh would have nothing to do with fixing it or not, and yes, AppleCare would cover a faulty port.
    Resetting your PMU will return your hardware settings to default values, including NVRAM.
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=14449
    Good Luck,
    Joe

  • Ethernet port dead- new logic board needed?

    The ethernet port on my 2010 iMac 21.5" died after a storm last week, so I brought it to the Apple store to have it checked out.  They said it needs a new logic board since the port is connected to it, which will cost around $700.  I can't see spending that much money to fix it, anyone have an ideas on where I could sell it for parts?  The guy I spoke to at the store said to give it a shot

    Is your wireless still working?  You could connect your Mac over Wi-Fi instead, if you still wanted to use the Mac, that is.  Or use a USB Ethernet adapter.  Apple sells one for $50 that was primarily for the Macbook Air, but will work with any recent mac.  But if you already have Wi-Fi, then I'd try that.  And if you don't have Wi-Fi, it still may be useful to try Wi-Fi first because even if the Mac's Wi-Fi doesn't work, you can still attach other computers or devices like iPads or iPhones, etc.  Whereas it would be a waste to buy the USB ethernet adapter only to find out that the USB ports on your Mac were also affected by the storm.
    Otherwise, as usual, you can always sell on eBay & Craigslist.

  • Straighten bent aluminum macbook pro case

    Hi there,
    Basically, we dropped the macbook on the back left corner (by the power adapter) and bent the case. The bend is right at the ethernet port.
    The computer works fine, but I'm concerned about the slight rubbing of the display against the body (when you open and close it). So I looked into a new upper bottom body but for $299 I thought, heck, its aluminum, maybe I can follow the directions (ifixit.com) and straighten out the bent parts.
    Yes, I know it voids everything but it's the cheapest way to go (free except for tools) and seems reasonable.
    Has anyone had any success in straightening out a bent Macbook case? Any tips/suggestions?
    Thanks

    You voided your warranty when you dropped the machine, so you can't void it any farther by trying to bend it back. You'll never make it look right, but you may be able to eliminate or reduce the rubbing that concerns you.

  • Question about Ethernet Port

    Fumbling in the dark, I knocked by 12" G4 off the table. It must have landed where the ethernet cable connects to the port. I'm now unable to access the network using ethernet. Everything else works okay -- I can use wifi, and all the applications work normally. The reason I use ethernet is because once in a while my wifi connection drops (due to a baby monitor nearby?).
    Do you think this would be a simple fix, or should I bring it in to a shop? My husband is pretty handy with computers and has torn his old G3 apart several times.

    Nancy: This is probably going to require replacing the logic board, to which the Ethernet port is (was) soldered. It's a difficult job, and the part will cost $200-300 used.
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Repair/Installing-PowerBook-G4-Aluminum-12-Inch-1-1- 5-GHz-Logic-Board/553/1

  • Powerbook 15" 1.5 Ethernet port

    Hello, I bought a refurbished Powerbook 15" aluminum from Apple in September.
    Went to plug in an ethernet cable last night and I couldn't get it to click in. Tried 4 different cables (both ends, so 8 RJ connectors) with no luck. Is my ethernet port damaged? The cable will push in no problem but it never clicks or has any retention. Just kind floats around.
    Where do I go from here? Also, I looked around a bit and couldn't find a phone number for Apple. Anyone have it?

    Just to follow up. Called Apple tech support. 1st guy I spoke to was a little rough but one of their specialist was extremely helpful and courteous. Looks like it's going to need to be replaced when I get back in the States. I was able to establish a connection with my router via the ethernet port but the cable is not secure. Thanks for the help guys. Much appreciated.
    Jeff

  • Bad Ethernet Ports on T61 Laptops

    We have 175 T61p laptops and have had multiple problems from bad drivers corrupting hard drives, bad drivers causing lockups, bad video drivers causing issues with dual screens and bad bios causing lockup of PC's on Docking stations.  All of which Lenovo support said they never had any reports of but then months later they have a fix ready for general release.  Oh, what ever happened to honesty! So here is the latest issue.
    Have you experienced a bad ethernet port on your T61 laptop.  We have found that around 20 laptops (11.4% failure rate)  that within a year the physical ethernet port on the laptop stops working.  Many times it will work for a while but if  you so much as touch the cable it looses the connection.  It seems that the problem is that the second pin from the right fails and no longer "pops" back up to the correct position.  Sometimes the port will work if you push the cable firmly into the port but if you move the laptop or touch the cable it will become disconnected.  The same cables work fine in other laptops and switches.
    Of course (as with all the other cases) Lenovo has told us that no one else has ever reported the problems and our users who get new laptops every two years have suddently started putting phone cables into their laptops (when was the last time anyone used a phone cable, our phones don't even use them anymore!)
    Have you had to have your ethernet port replaced?  Do you have a bad ethernet port?
    Grab a flashlight and look at your ethernet port.  Is one of the pins lower then the others?
    If so please contact me on this post.  I am trying to work through this problem with Lenovo but they will not honor their substandard machines! 
    Thank you!

    I don't the machine type matters. The drivers and the ports are the same.
    We use nVidia Discrete Graphics and we have had a couple of those get corrupted - fixed by an uninstall and reinstall - but not at a higher rate than the Dell PCs we're waiting to come off lease.
    We also have about 30 R61i's which are almost the same with Intel graphics and they have been pretty stable, too.
    The biggest issue so far was the ThinkPad wireless card driver on the T400s cause blue screens when trying to change your Windows password but that is a known issue and going back to an earlier wireless card driver solved that.
    The pins look fine, too.
    What are they doing there to bend those up?
    ThinkPad T61 15 Widescreen with nVidia Quadro graphics 6459CTO
    Windows 7 Enterprise and Windows XP Pro

  • Ethernet port fried by lightning strike?

    My phone line and home was struck by lightning this weekend. All of the DSL filters in my home were fried and blown open simultaneously, the DSL modem was fried, and even with a new modem, I cannot connect. Is there any way (without taking it in) to test the ethernet port itself? Is there some sort of internal diagnostic that can detect a faulty port? The computer works fine otherwise. IF the port is dead, is it better to buy a new computer? (My insurance is covering all damages), or is the cost to repair something like this minor? I have read about using an airport as a go-around, but I'd rather fix the problem, not patch it. ANY and all info will be helpful. Thanks.

    caparsons wrote:
    My phone line and home was struck by lightning this weekend. All of the DSL filters in my home were fried and blown open simultaneously, the DSL modem was fried, and even with a new modem, I cannot connect. Is there any way (without taking it in) to test the ethernet port itself? Is there some sort of internal diagnostic that can detect a faulty port? The computer works fine otherwise. IF the port is dead, is it better to buy a new computer? (My insurance is covering all damages), or is the cost to repair something like this minor? I have read about using an airport as a go-around, but I'd rather fix the problem, not patch it. ANY and all info will be helpful. Thanks.
    If the Ethernet port on an iMac is fried, you can replace that port only by _replacing the entire motherboard_. Depending on the kind of motherboard, the price could be several hundred dollars. It might be more cost-effective to get a new computer.

  • Built-in ethernet port not working in unibody Mac Mini

    Hi,
    So ever since I acquired this new mac mini I haven't been able to get it to recognize any devices connected via ethernet. I obviously checked the cables and all is good there. I tried connecting it to another mac, and while the other machine was detecting a device (the mac mini) at the other end of the cable, the mac mini kept saying that the cable is unplugged or the device off.
    After several days of having the issue I decided to remove the ethernet service from the network preference pane to set it up again but to my surprise, the built-in ethernet option was not available (I only got airport, firewire, bluetooth DUN, VPN, PPPoE and 6 to 4). At this point I tried removing the networkinterfaces.plist file form the system configuration folder in the system preferences folder to no avail. I then tried to zap the PRAM, NVRAM, reset the SMU, SMC and all that kind of things to get the port recognized by the system but no luck.
    When I look at the system profile I get these weird results in Ethernet Cards:
    pci14e4,4353:
    Type: Other Network Controller
    Bus: PCI
    Vendor ID: 0x14e4
    Device ID: 0x4353
    Subsystem Vendor ID: 0x106b
    Subsystem ID: 0x0093
    Revision ID: 0x0001
    Link Width: x1
    BSD name: en0
    Kext name: AppleAirPortBrcm43224.kext
    Location: /System/Library/Extensions/IO80211Family.kext/Contents/PlugIns/AppleAirPortBrcm 43224.kext
    Version: 425.16.2
    Comparing it to other macs I have It should read "ethernet" rather than that strange pci name on top and the kext name shouldn't read airport but something like AppleIntel and in location it shouldn't direct to the IO80211Family.kext package but rather to the IONetworkingFamily.kext.
    So I popped in the system install DVD and fired up System profiler and at that point I didn't even get an "ethernet cards" option in the left side pane. So this is leading me to believe that the hardware is not being recognized at all, so maybe it's damaged. I did replace the HDD with a bigger one and change the RAM modules to bigger ones but I don't think I could have damaged the hardware in these processes, also I don't see how this would affect the ethernet port as it's integrated to Motherboard and didn't messed with it at all (I was very careful, to say the least!).
    The last thing to do is reinstalling the system but I don't think it'll help (after seeing that the ethernet port is not even being detected by the install OS) but I need to offload all the data from my internal disk and at the moment I don't have an spare drive to do it.
    So, what's the recommendation? A field trip to an Apple Store? Closest one is like 3,000 km from where I am right now, so...
    Well, thanks for any pointers, suggestions and help in general.

    I do not have any answers for you. Yes it appears to be reading what should be an ethernet card as an AirPort card. Have you played around with trying to install another version of Mac OS X other than the version that shipped with the Mac mini? Apple has long told us that we should not install a version of Mac OS X that was older than the shipping version. With the Mid 2010 Mac mini, the Restore DVD has the only version of Snow Leopard that will work with this Mac mini's specific hardware. At least until Apple releases 10.6.5. If you have installed other versions of Mac OS X, then erasing the HDD and installing the OS from the Restore DVD(s) that shipped with the mini may get you back to the point you need to be.
    Unfortunately I think that you voided your Apple Warranty when you installed the different HDD. That was always a question in the past when folks wanted to open the former version of Mac minis and upgrade the RAM. But with the 2009 models folks started reporting here in the Apple Discussions that Apple was informing them that they had voided their warranty by opening their Mac mini. This new model made the RAM user upgradable, but the User Manual specifically states on page 43, 54 and 61 that there are no user serviceable parts in the Mid 2010 Mac mini except the memory.
    Dah•veed

  • Airport Extreme - creating a wired local network from a cellular hotspot without ethernet ports?

    Forgive the book I've written below, please. I generally think too much info is better than not enough... I'm looking for assistance and/or suggestions since I have been unable to locate solutions on my own so far. Searching this forum has found a great number of "sort-of" related things, but all of them so far appear to involve apple-only hardware or upstream network devices which have ethernet ports. Nothing that seems to match my situation enough to extrapolate out. Maybe I'm just using the wrong keywords. Anyway....
    I've recently moved to a particularly rural area with no wired internet access to speak of (well, I suppose there is dial-up, but... yeah). I've tried several different wireless varieties including satellite, the AT&T Elevate 4G hotspot and a service that used an EVDO-cellular solution(a sprint-based reseller).  The former had serious latency issues which I had predicted and so was right-out. The last had signal coverage problems which their maps did not accurately reveal. Their potential mitigation was to have me invest even more money into a super-mega antenna to be roof-mounted. And even that was an uncertain fix. The AT&T solution with the 4G hotspot has been AMAZING so far and I love it. Coverage is great, latency and bandwidth fantastic.
    I love it but for one exception, that is. Connectivity options.
    There is a particularly limited number of WiFi connections available and only a USB network adapter for a single computer. None of my wired-only network devices can connect directly and I have significantly more WiFi connected devices in general use than the device supports.
    I have an Airport Extreme that I was using as my primary connection point through a FiOS router at my previous home(and both the satellite and EVDO modems at the new place). Never had any problems with it when feeding its WAN port with one of the various routers' LAN ports. However, as has been evident by reading all sorts of posts here and elsewhere, having it connect via WiFi to the Elevate means that the ethernet ports are disabled. Not terribly useful.
    The Elevate has no ethernet ports. Only WiFi and USB network connectivity.
    The Elevate does not appear to have settings available to create a WDS network-- so it cannot be "Extended" via those methods, either, as far as I am able to tell.
    So these are some thoughts I've had. Before I invest the time and money into them(both of which are in extremely short supply lately), I'd like to know if anyone else has already solved the issue or can tell me definitively whether these ideas, or some I haven't thought of, will or won't work. Any helpful feedback or thoughts would be sincerely appreciated.
    Options I've considered, but are uncertain:
    -A Wifi/Ethernet or even ethernet-only router which has a USB WAN uplink(I've had a few bites on searching, but nobody seems 100% clear on the capability for the models I've located). I could plug the Elevate into that USB port and then from there I'm golden. If this is the best option, then can someone recommend a brand/model that they know will work in this way?
    -WiFi Access Point (Airport Express, maybe?) that will connect to the elevate via WiFi, and then use its single Ethernet port to serve as the APExtreme's WAN uplink. (I don't know if this will work at all, actually...)
    -Connect to the computer via USB, run some kind of network bridging software (which I don't know what the heck that would be) to bridge between the USB Network and the Ethernet port, then run a hard wire from there to the APExtreme's standard ethernet WAN uplink. This is going to be a "last resort" option since it involves software I'm unfamiliar with, even unsure of availability for Mac, and requires the computer to be running and configured properly at all times. Given the way my kids abuse a computer, I can't be certain of anything involving this option.
    -Some secret method of turning on WDS capabilities in the Elevate which would then allow my existing base station to become a second node in the chain. I really wish someone could tell me this is possible if only I'd push the right buttons. I see this is as the absolute best option, if it can be done. Cheapest, anyway.
    Current set-up:
    AT&T Elevate 4G hotspot
    WiFi connected devices(rotating since Wifi connection count is limited): Mac PC, 2 iPads, 3 iPhones, Apple TV, a Nokia mini-tablet, a Kindle fire, Wii, XBox 360, an old dell laptop issued by my office.
    Apple Aiport Extreme base station
    Wired connections: blueray player, television, satellite TV pay-per-view uplinky device thing.
    Please, tell me your thoughts?

    Had the same issue here.  Here is the best solution I have found so far:
    Hotspot + Pepwave Max On-The-Go (w/ Load Balancing) + Airport Extreme
    I have a VZW MiFi, but I believe this set-up will work with other hotspot devices.  I actually have 2 MiFi Hotspots with a monthly allowance of 20G each.  They are plugged directly into the Pepwave router (aka, tethered).  (Note:  you have to have the right cable to do this.  The one that came with my Hotspot was only for charging.)  If, for some reason, you cannot tether with your Hotspot device, you want a router that offers WiFi as WAN.  The Pepwave will do this.  The Pepwave is connected to my Airport Extreme via ethernet cable.  I have the WiFi on the MiFis and the Pepwave turned off.  So the only visible network is my Airport Extreme.  The Pepwave is essentially just functioning as a modem.
    I used to have a Cradlepoint, but I did not find it very user friendly--too complex for home use.  The Pepwave Max OTG is awesome.  I got the one with Load Balancing so it allows you to connect up to 4 cellular devices.  If you only need the one Hotspot, you can just get the cheaper Pepwave Max OTG.  The Pepwave allows me to run off one of the MiFis until I hit my 20G/month allowance, then it automatically switches to the other one.  That way I never max-out on my monthly data allowance.  Additionally, it gives you a real-time, hourly, daily and monthly running tally on data usage.
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