word of advice for AirPort Extreme
#1
Posted 07 February 2003 - 09:01 PM
I came home with a bran new AirPort Extreme base station a few hours ago and plugged it into the cable modem, then plugged the power support on and watched it boot. It instantly showed up on my Ti when it was done booting and I could access the web as the base station had grabbed all data it needed from the cable modem. "Sweet!" I thought, "this is really easy!" Then I decided to rename the network as Apple Network 3g43h31z was not a very appealing name. I started up AirPort Admin Utility and searched for bases. Nothing. I thought a reset of the base might do it and reset it. Nothing. I unplugged the cable modem and restarted it. Nothing.
I checked the box for instructions but could not find any helpfull things. Then I put the CD in that came with it and installed the software purely on a whim. I had to restart my Ti and when it came up I could configure the base.
Apparently Apple does not include the drivers for the new Extreme base stations through software updates. So, install the software that comes on the disk and save yourself an hour of chasing down a problem.
#2
Posted 07 February 2003 - 09:03 PM
#3
Posted 07 February 2003 - 09:14 PM
For now that really doe snot concern me as I only have a Ti 500 that does not use the g standard. Once I upgrade to something better I will probaby get the external antenna, if the range does not cover my admittedly small condo. For now the range is excellent, even on my Ti 500.
#4
Posted 08 February 2003 - 11:30 AM
-AVGuy
#5
Posted 08 February 2003 - 11:42 AM
If you have extreme and a g card and you pass 50' do you lose the signal or do both base station and card switch to 802.11b?
Just guessing, but I would think it "throttles down" to a slower 802.11g speed until you get so far away that it can only go at 11Mbps or slower than it will switch to 802.11b. Again, just my guess.
Also, can you bridge a connection with one snow base station and one extreme or do you need two etremes?
I'm curious as well.
MacCheetah3
"Are you touching my leg for a reason?"
#6
Posted 09 February 2003 - 12:43 AM
It actually seems to give me just a tad more range than the old one, which is dearly needed as I have a Ti 500. I can now finally sit in bed and surf the web without loosing the signal all the time.
One major new feature is of course the built in print server. I was not expecting my Lexmark Z42 to work with it as it was not among the specified compatible printers that are mentioned on the apple.com specs. I tried just now and it works like a charm! This is truly apple at its best. All I had to do was plug the printer's usb cable into the base and a new tab appeared in my printer dialogue on my Ti called rendevouz printers. Once I selected that and chose my printer from the list (it was the only one in it as it is the only one on the network) it took about 5 seconds for the printer to be moved into the list. No drivers needed! Just plug it in and it works. Now I can print without wires! Truly awesome. It is a tad slower than plugging the printer straight into the Ti as the base apparently cannot store all the data at once. But hey, I take that for having a better range and printing without wires any day.
#7
Posted 09 February 2003 - 08:01 AM
#8
Posted 09 February 2003 - 09:00 AM
-AVGuy
#9
Posted 09 February 2003 - 09:23 AM
#11
Posted 09 February 2003 - 09:38 AM
As far as your second question is concerned, I am pretty much positive that in order to bridge two base stations, both need to be extreme(or at least 802.11 g, as I am not sure about third party 802.11 g base stations), because the 802.11 b base station does not support this feature, and that it was only very recently introduced only in the newer extreme model.
#13
Posted 09 February 2003 - 04:11 PM
Let's hope that is only a matter of updating the firmware and drivers.
... I'm not buying any extra wireless equipment 'till those things are "set in airwaves".
icerabbit



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