Share Apple TV Internet connection over ethernet?

I want to share my internet that I'm getting wireless through my Apple TV with my PS3 (which isn't wifi capable). Problem is 1) I don't know where I could turn sharing on and 2) when I plug an ethernet cable in, the wifi disables. Is there a solution that doesn't involve extensive hacking? Much Thanks!
Bob

Short of installing a third wireless router as a relay, I was hoping for a more efficient solution. Thanks!
You don't necessarily need another router. If you can run an ethernet cable from your router to a point closer to the basement, a simple wireless access point connected to the router by cable would be enough to boost the wi-fi range.

Similar Messages

  • Sharing Airport Internet connection Over Ethernet

    Hi
    I've read various things about this on the forums here, but none of them seem to make a considerable amount of sense seeing as the person just magically works out the problem. So I'll attempt to describe my problem.
    I'm trying to share my Intel iMac's Airport connection to another mac running 10.4.6 over ethernet. I'm using crossover cable, and so far I've got the two computers to recognise each other in Network tab of the Finder, so I can mount the other's HD on my desktop if i wanted. BUT, I am having no luck with sharing my internet connection, I have the 'Share my Airport connection over Ethernet' settings ticked in System Preferences on the iMac with airport, but the "light" on the network overview page is orange on both computers, and the one connected with ethernet does not connect to the internet.
    Any idea what I may be doing wrong?
    Thanks a lot
    Mo

    You are sharing one connection from the main unit to a secondary unit. The secondary unit only has access through the main unit, so the system doesn't see a personal web connection, just a web connection. In order to share that connection, it must be seen as a "personal" or directly connected form of network. This is so that somebody can't just steal your connection and then filter it to a billion computers and hack you and really mess up your system. If you want to share that connection, I suggest you invest in a wireless router. Then you can share all peripherals from the main unit and other units in any configuration you wish, and then use your secondary(wireless) unit to share directly to the third unit(crossover cable) without having to set a bunch of manual controls and troubleshoot. Printers, some scanners, and sometimes even dvd burners can be shared across a router. And because the system reads two connections(comp-to-comp and comp-to-web) through the router, you can actually fully network all peripherals to work across each unit, so long as they all run the same versions of OS and software. Just remember, you get what you pay for with routers. $100-$200 should get you something decent and a USB speed-booster card wouldn't hurt if you can get it as part of the whole router package. I've used the same type of configuration and it has saved me days, even weeks of trying to move data onto cds and dvds to move between computers for using with different programs and tasks.
    good luck

  • Share my Mini's Internet connection over Ethernet?

    Hi there,
    My Mini is currently connected over wi-fi to my broadband connection. Next to my Mini is my TV. My TV is soon to be able to receive the BBC's iPlayer as I use Freesat (http://freesat.co.uk). The TV has an Ethernet socket with which I will need to connect to the Internet.
    Can I use my Mini's Ethernet and ultimate wireless connection to provide my TV with an Internet connection?
    I've just been investigating things in the Sharing section of Sys Prefs and I get a warning come up when I select Share from Ethernet and Share To Ethernet about my ISP cutting me off... I' with BT in the here in the UK - so not a cable provider, just an old fashioned copper wired ADSL line. Is the warning to be heeded or ignored?
    Many thanks

    Gotcha - many thanks.
    Incidentally, am I able to set up my Xbox in the same way (assuming that I wouldn't have the TV connected at the same time as the Xbox).
    Thanks,
    Tom

  • Slow internet connection over ethernet, fast over wireless?!

    Using an Airport Extreme (802.11n) I am connected to the internet through an X-Modem. My Macbook connects to the internet wirelessly and can download a large web page in 13 seconds, the same page takes 85 seconds when downloaded by my G4 iMac using an ethernet connection directly to the Airport (even if the MacBook is switched off).
    I have eliminated the iMac as the culprit by plugging the ethernet cable directly into the modem as a test and achieving a decent connection speed.
    Any bright ideas about how to solve this little connundrum?

    Glyn
    Checked my Network settings as suggested. The DHCP was fine but somehow I had a specified server in the 'DNS servers' box. Cleared this and the iMac is now connecting perfectly.
    Thanks to you and Duane for your hepl.
    PR

  • Internet sharing over ethernet

    My iMac here is sharing my dialup internet connection over ethernet.
    my iBook is set to Configure IPv4 using DHCP but it's getting an IP of 192.168.2.12 and the subnet 255.255.255.0 and the Router 192.168.2.1.
    But the iMac isn't even connected to the internet yet? o.O it's a crossover cable directly between the two computers so there is no other computer on the network. Airport is off on the laptop and I don't own a base station yet.

    The computer gets its IP address from the router not from the Internet. If you have Internet Sharing turned on, then your iMac is acting as a router and providing an IP address to the laptop via the Ethernet cable connection.

  • Problems sharing internet connection over airport

    Hi everyone-
    I've researched the heck out of the forums and still cant figure out what's happening with my system. I've got a MacBook Pro with OS 10.5.2. In previous OS versions (10.4) when I was successfully sharing my ethernet internet connection, the airport icon in the status bar showed a vertical "up" arrow, indicating that my connection was being shared.
    I'm trying to do the same thing in OS 10.5.2 but not succeeding in getting the same notification. I'm finding that when I access the "Sharing" folder under "System Preferences" and select "Share your internet connection from: ethernet" and "To computers using: Airport" that both settings grey out, the "Internet Sharing" button turns green and the status says "On", but no sharing occurs. I've checked using other wireless laptops and a wifi finder, but no signal from my MacBook is ever found.
    I've deleted my preferences folder to start fresh, no help. I've tried sharing from different ethernet sources, no help. It just feels like the problem is in the OS somewhere, not with the internet connection.
    Any insight or help would be greatly appreciated! Thanks!

    seems like i got the same issue as u and i just posted it:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1425809

  • Streaming MacBooks Internet Connection over WiFi

    Hi together,
    I've got the problem that i won't have an internet connection in my house for quite some time now.
    I own an iPhone and a MacBook Pro. I'm usually using the "personal hotspot" feature to access the internet from the MacBook.
    The problem is now that both my PS3 or other devices can't connect to the internet.
    My idea is to connect the MacBook via Ethernet or WiFi to an Airport Extreme Station in order to share the MacBooks internet connection all over the network and with the PS3.
    Is this somehow possible or can the "tethered" internet of the MacBook not be shared through a network?
    Best Regards,
    Marc

    For the better connectivity please verify that you have got an 802.11n card in your computer. New generation routers (i.e. E1200) speaks an entirely different language than 802.11g cards, so while those adapters can work with the E1200 for example, they are not optimized to work with it. It is like having to translate from one language to another in real time when going from N to G... So in those cases the old router will show a stronger signal than the new one.

  • Unable to receive internet connection over wifi connection.  Shows that I am connected to the network, but do not have internet access.  Checked my firewall and turned it off.  What else am I missing or should be doing differently?

    Unable to receive internet connection over wifi connection.  Shows that I am connected to the network, but do not have internet access.  Checked my firewall and turned it off.  What else am I missing or should be doing differently?

    You might want to try resetting your router and your modem - just unplug the cords, leave them unplugged for about 3-5 minutes and then replug the modem and then the router in that order.
    This may or may not correct your problem - call back if it doesn't.
    Clinton

  • How to share internet connection over wifi to an ethernet decive using airport express?

    Hi i have a device that it can only be connected to the internet via ethernet in a diferent room (and far) where my primary internet connection is. I have my network configured like this: cable modem >>>  connected via ethernet >>> to airport time capsule >>> connectes via wi fi >>> to airport express last generation "n" >>> connected via ethernet cable to device. The problem is that i'm not having internet conection in my ethernet connected device. Anyone know if I have to configure something in some special way or if i'm doing something wrong?
    Thanks
    Guido

    It should work fine..
    To figure this out, check if the Express is connected by wireless properly and getting an IP.. you will see that in airport utility.
    Make sure you are set to either extend or join the wireless network. The Express should then pass an IP to the "device".
    No luck start over.. reset everything to factory.
    If the TC is older model use 7.6.1 firmware.. it works much better for extend wireless.
    Use short names.. 2-20 characters no spaces and pure alphanumeric.
    Then set the Express again in extend wireless mode.
    It is pretty easy in v6 airport utility. Look at the posts from Bob Timmons on how to extend wireless.. he must have answered those question a thousand times in the last few years.
    Here is one I did. https://discussions.apple.com/message/24161378#24161378

  • "Share A Public IP address" Apple Utility Internet Connection

    After following advice in another thread I've gotten rid of some home network problems that started dogging me last Friday. I got rid of a Netgear router that was evidently causing IP problems with the Extreme.
    I've had to re-set the Extreme and now I am wondering if I want to under the Internet Connection Tab of the Airport Utility set "Connection Sharing" to "Share a public IP address"?
    I am now using the Extreme (N only) as a router, and have it feeding an Express(G only), a Netgear switch and two hard wired/Ethernet connected desktops.
    Thanks for any advice is one way or the other more secure from the outside world. I do have the Apple Firewall on my computer on.

    Unfortunately, you will need to "hard reset" your AirPort Express to clear out the old and conflicting settings on the device.
    To do that, hold in the reset button until the amber light begins to blink more quickly and keep holding another 4-5 seconds when this occurs, then release the reset button and the AirPort Express will restart. You should have a slow blinking amber light after 40-45 seconds. That is your signal that the Express can be reconfigured as you had it originally.
    Since you are effectively trying to run two routers, both handling DHCP on your network, you may need to keep an eye on things. Even if you avoid the IP address conflicts, you will have to deal with a Double NAT error on your network, which can slow communications between devices (and the Internet).

  • Internet connection over AppleTalk

    I have my Cable modem routed to a Linksys 4 port Router. One of the ports connects to an Assante Ethernet to AppleTalk converter. I am able to use this AppleTalk connection to share files throughout the house to various older Macs. My cousin just gave me a Power Mac 6100/60 with 24 MB ram and 160 MB Hard Disk. I upgraded to OS 8.1, (OS 9.1 complained the was not enough memory) and installed Netscape 4.8, ( Netscape 6 froze on startup ) but am unable to connect to the internet. Is this possible, or am I spinning my wheels?
    Any thought are welcome, Thanks
    IMac   Mac OS X (10.4.5)  

    Jan
    Found where I read OS 7.6 as max for LocalTalk Bridge:
    http://retrotechnology.com/herbsstuff/mnet.html
    Herb's Mac Networking and Communications Parts
    Most recent revision of this page May 29 2006.
    One of my customers had this to say about Ethernet connections between old Macs and recent Macs:
    "The best way to network new and old Macs is by using Apple's LocalTalk Bridge control panel on a older Mac as a file/print server that has LocalTalk and Ethernet and supports system 7.1-7.6.1. A 7500-7600 (or 6360 with Ethernet card) with decent memory (64MBytes) and processor speed would work for such an application, working as a file/print server for AppleTalk over Ethernet and LocalTalk simultaneously. Unfortunately LocalTalk Bridge doesn't work under system 8, so no HFS+ [formatted drive or partition can be] on that local machine, but it can read/write HFS+ volumes mounted over the network. However if the need is solely for old Laserwriter print services for OSX clients which don't support Appletalk over LocalTalk serial ports but do over Ethernet, LocalTalk Bridge's cousin LaserWriter Bridge will work with at least OS 8.1. [For] StyleWriters, the Stylewriter 2400 with a Localtalk [adapter] module would also work."

  • BUG: Mail (GMAIL IMAP) no longer connects over ethernet, only wireless

    I too was puzzled last night when I couldn't get my gmail account to go online. I did a lot of reading, and tried various things (to no avail), but ultimately decided it was just a configuration error, or combination of other programs running...or maybe even (as read in other posts) Google's servers. I found the server problem unlikely though, since I could also log in via the web interface.
    Mysteriously, opening Mail on a separate MBP over either ethernet or wireless was 100% normal...as was the imap connection on my iPad via 3G or wireless...so what was causing my brand new MBAir to choke? Sleep on it, I said to myself.
    Well here I am on day 2 of Mail refusing to connect. Connection doctor always shows 'green' next to connection status (Mail was able to connect to the internet), but red for both imap and smtp servers, with messages reading "Mail could not connect to this IMAP/SMTP server. Check your network connection and that you entered the correct information in Account preferences. Also verify the server supports SSL. If it does not, deselect the 'Use SSL' checkbox in the Advanced tab of Account preferences."
    I've eliminated the server issue, because my MBP still opened Mail just fine while connected to my network here at home.
    Then, just for fun, I decided to unplug my ethernet (which is attached via Apple's own USB Ethernet adapter), and turn on my wireless. Almost instantly, Mail popped to life on my MBAir, and started syncing with gmail/IMAP.
    In the two months I have owned this MBAir, getting Mail to work over ethernet had never been a problem. My issues seemed to parallel the recent influx of problems reported with gmail & IMAP.
    I still cannot get Mail to access gmail over the USB Ethernet Adapter. What gives, Apple? Anyone else experiencing these symptoms on these new MBAirs?
    Model Name: MacBook Air
    Boot ROM Version: MBA31.0061.B01
    SMC Version (system): 1.66f54

    Turns out I was a victim of my own [tight] security. I had a SOCKS proxy enabled on my Ethernet for when I take this laptop on the road...I used it to connect securely to my server back home. Obviously at home my SOCKS proxy was not connecting from within my private network. As soon as I removed the SOCKS proxy, voilá! GMAIL IMAP works perfectly over the USB Ethernet adapter once again.
    I hope this serves as a reminder to thoroughly check your network settings before driving yourself mad!
    Cheers!

  • Sharing internet connection over bluetooth

    i have 2 computers less than 10 metres apart, one of which is connected to the internet broadband. the solution for sharing the connection wirelessly with this particular setup is rather expensive.
    i was wondering if it would be possible to share the internet connection on the computer that has it over bluetooth with the other computer.
    i read an archived response suggesting that it was. can someone confirm?
    just to be clear:
    i hoping to have 2 computers bluetooth connected the second of which will be able to connect to the internet via the 1st computers connection.

    While it is not explicitly supported by OS X, both machines can be configured to do this. For lots of reasons, I don't think that this is a good idea. Your Bluetooth link is so slow compared to either a wireless—or even much faster terrestrial—ethernet link, that it's not worth the effort to enable this service.
    Save yourself a great deal of grief and disappointment, and get ahold of a relatively inexpensive ethernet gateway [wired or wireless] and set up a small local area network. You will be far more secure, and enjoy a far better level of performance than you would see if you attempted to create a Bluetooth LAN.
    That said, here is a set of instructions for enabling internet sharing using Terminal commands. It's paraphrased from…
    http://www.macgeekery.com/hacks/pppoverbluetooth
    In the Bluetooth preference pane's sharing tab, make a new Serial Port Service and name it bt-ppp and make it an RS-232 device. If it's on, disable internet sharing in the Sharing prefpane. Then create the following script [shown below.]
    The script starts pppd on the new Bluetooth serial device you've created, then sets up IP forwarding, NAT, and the like. The en0 can be replaced with en1 if your primary net connection is AirPort. You can change the IP listed to something appropriate for your network, as well. If you put it in the range of IPs you're already using for your home network, natd is smart enough to work as a router instead of a gateway. Run as root, but—for the love of all that is holy and just—use sudo instead of su.
    This is the script you must run in terminal:
    /usr/sbin/pppd /dev/tty.bt-ppp 115200 noauth local passive proxyarp asyncmap 0 silent persist :10.1.1.25 &
    /usr/sbin/sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding=1
    /usr/sbin/natd -same_ports -use_sockets -log -deny_incoming -interface en0
    /sbin/ipfw add divert natd ip from any to any via en0
    If you are unfamiliar with issuing commands from the Terminal or are not familiar with what these unix commands mean, I would suggest that you proceed very cautiously, and do more research before attempting this.

  • How to share Windows 7 Internet connection AND Extreme USB hard disk?

    Hi All,
    I'm trying to share the mobile broadband Internet connection on a Windows 7 PC as well as the USB hard disk connected to the Airport Extreme (2nd Gen) with other WiFi devices. The problem is that I can get either the one to work or the other, but not both.
    When I configure the Airport Extreme for DHCP+NAT, all machines on the Airport network can see each other, share files, etc. When I enable Internet Connection Sharing on the Windows 7 machine, the only way I've gotten that to work is to set the Airport Extreme to bridge mode, but then file sharing of the Airport Extreme's disk no longer works.
    Device info: Internet-connected Dell Latitude E5420 Windows 7 Professional 32-bit, Airport Extreme 802.11n (2nd Gen), Windows XP Home Edition + Nokia N8 + etc. WiFi devices.
    I've read all the manuals I could find and searched these forums but haven't been able to figure out a solution. I'm really getting desperate and will really appreciate any and all suggestions!
    Many thanks,
    Francois

    I've found a solution that works with my existing equipment. It's now possible to share the Windows 7 machine's Internet connection at the same time as the AirPort's drive. An additional challenge was to avoid having to manually reconfigure every WiFi client, but it turned out that's also possible.
    For the sake of posterity, here's the guide! :-)
    Background
    My setup is based on an AirPort Extreme access point WiFi network. The AirPort shares a hard drive, and a number of Windows clients connect to the network. One of these, a Windows 7 machine, has a USB mobile broadband dongle which I also wanted to share with the network.
    Previously I got this to work, but whatever configuration I came up with required manual reconfiguration of each network client, one way or the other. This was not ideal. Also, Internet Connection Sharing (ICS) defaults to IP address .1, the same one to which the AirPort defaults. This needed manual reconfiguration of the ICS host each time ICS was turned on.
    Solution
    THIS SOLUTION REQUIRES THE AIRPORT TO BE IN EITHER DHCP + NAT OR DHCP MODE. IF FOR SOME REASON YOU DEPEND ON THE AIRPORT BEING IN BRIDGE MODE, UNFORTUNATELY THIS SOLUTION WILL NOT WORK FOR YOU.
    1. Do the AirPort's non-Internet configuration
    On the AirPort Utility main screen, click the AirPort button, work through all the tab sheets and configure the items as you require. Do the same for the Printers, Disks and Advanced buttons. Once that's complete, we can do the Internet configuration.
    2. Set the AirPort to DHCP & NAT
    This is needed so you can choose the AirPort network address in the next step (but you can still set a different Connection Sharing mode later on, see step 7). For now, set Connection Sharing to Share a public IP address:
    3. Set the AirPort to the same network address as ICS
    Set the AirPort to the network address used by ICS, namely 192.168.137.xyz. Note that the AirPort does not allow a beginning address below 2:
    4. Obtain the AirPort's MAC addresses
    These will be used in the next step. Record both the Airport ID as well as the Ethernet ID:
    5. Fix the AirPort IP addresses to prevent clashing with ICS
    The AirPort will default to the same IP address as ICS, namely 192.168.137.1. To prevent this, assign different addresses to the AirPort with DHCP reservations. Underneath DHCP Reservations, click the '+' and create reservations for each of the AirPort and Ethernet interfaces. You can use other values, but to be consistent with the rest of this guide use 192.168.137.253 for the AirPort interface and 192.168.137.254 for the Ethernet inteface:
    6. Distribute ICS configuration data with AirPort DHCP
    Yes, you read right! This is where the magic happens. To avoid having to manually configure each WiFi client for the additional ICS network, that configuration data is included with the AirPort DHCP configuration. Assuming you've stuck to the numbers above, configure the TCP/IP screen exactly as shown. .254 is the AirPort router (and also its Ethernet interface) address, and .1 is the IP address that Windows configures for the ICS interface:
    7. Set AirPort Connection Sharing
    If your AirPort is sharing a connection on its WAN port, choose Share a public IP address, otherwise choose Distribute a range of IP address. In the latter case the NAT tab disappears:
    8. Save your AirPort's configuration
    Your AirPort configuration is now complete and you can push the Update button. Once your AirPort has rebooted, its network will be fully operational.
    9. Ensure your Internet sharing port is correctly configured
    ICS involves two network ports on the sharing computer - the shared Internet-connected port, and the sharing port connected to your local network. When you enable ICS on the shared port, Windows will temporarily configure the sharing port's settings to fit in with the scheme above (it will get the fixed IP address 192.168.137.1). When ICS is disabled, Windows will restore the default configuration of the sharing port. The purpose of this step is to ensure that the default sharing port configuration is correct. When ICS is inactive the sharing port needs to obtain an IP address automatically from the AirPort via DHCP. Right-click your chosen WiFi sharing connection > Properties > Networking > Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) > Properties and configure as follows:
    10. Share your Internet connection
    Right-click the connection you want to share > Properties > Sharing and configure as follows (you may find the other settings also useful but they're not covered here):
    And now you're ready to enjoy your local network services as well as your shared Internet connection, all on your Airport Extreme network - without having to lift a finger to configure network clients!
    Windows Network Profiles
    If you use Windows network profiles to distinguish between Home, Work and Public networks, here are some additional notes you may find useful.
    As Windows recognises networks, it applies their assigned profiles which add or remove sets of restrictions wrt. network discovery, file & printer sharing and so on. The amount of ICS configuration data that can be included with AirPort DHCP information is limited and in some instances this interferes with how Windows recognises networks.
    It seems that Windows recognises a network once a default router has been configured for it. Following are some known scenarios with fixes for each, based on that principle.
    1. WiFi network not recognised
    When ICS is enabled, on the ICS host Windows configures only an IP address for the sharing port and no default router. When ICS is disabled, on the ICS host this port receives its configuration from the AirPort via DHCP, as do all other WiFi clients. This DHCP configuration includes router information for the ICS network, but again no router information for the AirPort network itself.
    Therefore the AirPort network is not recognised on any Windows machines on the WiFi network, under any circumstances.
    To make Windows recognise the AirPort network, execute the following from the command line with Administrator privileges:
         route -4 add 0.0.0.0 mask 0.0.0.0 192.168.137.254 metric 3000
    This metric is high enough to ensure that "real" default routes get preference over this one.
    If you want to remove the above routing table entry, execute the following from the command line with Administrator privileges:
         route -4 delete 0.0.0.0 192.168.137.254
    For convenience I created shortcuts for these two commands.
    2. WiFi network recognised, unrecognised network remains
    Once you've added the route above to make Windows recognise your AirPort network, when ICS is disabled Windows will probably identify TWO networks on your WiFi adapter:
         Unidentified network, your_AirPort_network
    Windows now recognises your AirPort network, but the DHCP router entry for the inactive ICS network makes it think there must be yet another network. However, the 192.168.137.1 ICS port is not present when ICS is inactive, so Windows reports the inactive router entry as an unidentified network.
    If you want to remove this unidentified network/router entry, execute the following from the command line with Administrator privileges:
         route -4 delete 0.0.0.0 192.168.137.1
    On your Windows ICS host, removing this entry can cause no harm.
    However, on network clients where you removed this entry and subsequently want to share your Internet connection from again, you'll need to add it back.
    To restore the ICS router entry, execute the following from the command line with Administrator privileges:
         route -4 add 0.0.0.0 mask 0.0.0.0 192.168.137.1 metric 1

  • How do I set up multiple Airport Expresses to connect over ethernet for Airtunes only?

    I am trying to set up an Airtunes network using an Airport Extreme and three Airport Expresses connected together via ethernet (CAT5 cable). At each Airport Express there will be a speaker setup. I don't need/want internet connectivity on the network, but not sure if it is required for setup or not. I have made this work over wifi, using the Expresses to extend the network, but struggling to get this to work over ethernet.
    I would be verry grateful of a step-by-step method to setting this up! I am also looking to set up 6 airport expresses to do the same thing in another location.
    Thanks in advance!

    Thanks for the info.
    I assume that the AirPort Extreme is setup and working at this point.
    Work with one AirPort Express at a time to get them all configured, and then you can locate them where they will be needed.
    AirPort Setup will configure the Express devices to "extend a wireless network" using Ethernet, so they will be broadcasting the same wireless signal as the AirPort Extreme and provide more wireless signal coverage as well.
    I have yet to meet the first person who thought that they had too much wireless coverage, but you would have the option to turn off the wireless on the Express if you wanted. Most users like having extended wireless for their devices.
    Temporarily, move an Express close to the AirPort Extreme
    Connect a spare Ethernet cable from one of the LAN <-> ports on the Extreme to the WAN "O" port on the Express
    Power up the Express for a few minutes
    Hold in the reset button on the back of the Express for 10 seconds and release. Allow a full minute for the Express to restart to a slow, blinking amber light.
    Click the Airport icon at the top of the Mac's screen and wait a few seconds for AirPort Express to appear just under the listing of New AirPort Base Station
    Click directly on the AirPort Express
    AirPort Setup will open up automatically and take a minute to analyze the network, then announce that the Express will be configured to extend the AirPort Extreme network.
    Enter a device name that you want to use....example.....Express1.....and click Next
    AirPort Setup will configure everything for you. Notice that the message will say that the Express is being set up to extend using Ethernet. When you see the message of setup complete, click Done.
    Now you can move the Express to the remote location where it is needed, hook it up to the Ethernet connection there, power up the Express and set up AirTunes on the device.
    AirTunes is enabled by default, to other than make the speaker connection, you won't have much to do on that.
    Set up other Express devices the same way, except assign a different name to each device....example....Express2, Express3, etc.....to keep things organized.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Virtual cube with services

    Hi guys, Simple questoin!! Where do you write the function module - in R/3 or Bw system for virtual cube with services.

  • Error in control file

    I think I originally posted this in the wrong area: When starting up my database, I get: ORA-00205: error in identifying controlfile, check alert log for more info The Alert log shows: ORA-00204: error in reading (block 1, # blocks 1) of controlfile

  • Change of import cvd 16%to 14%

    Hi  experts,       In import pricing CVD is 16% so it has to be changed to 14% for all the vendors..So can u please reply me.its very urgent.its a high priority ticket.

  • Help deploy flash builder 4.5 project

    I need help. I am trying to deploy my first Flash Builder 4.5 project using the Zend framework.  My application runs fine on my localhost (on my home computer).  I am having trouble deploying it to my remote server. The error I receive is 'Send faile

  • ACME Video demo:JWS setup:Can't find classes

    *** ACME Video demo *** *** using: JDeveloper 3.0 (build 532) and JWS 2.0 *** I am having great troubles simply getting JWS (v2.0) to acknowlege existence of my WebAppServlet (ie, ACME Video demo). I have been able to use the demo from within JDevelo