Thursday, September 15, 2011

Apple AirPort Extreme Base Station (Simultaneous Dual-Band) (MC340LL/A)

The sleek, easy-to-use AirPort Extreme Base Station with simultaneous dual-band support is the perfect wireless access point for home, school, or small business. It offers fast, 802.11n Wi-Fi access for Mac computers, PCs, and Wi-Fi devices such as iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV.

Amazon Sales Rank: #605 in Consumer Electronics Brand: Apple Model: MC340LL/A Platform: Windows Format: CD Number of items: 1 Dimensions: 6.50" h x 6.50" w x 1.30" l, 1.66 pounds Simultaneous dual-band wireless base station supports 802.11b/g and 802.11n USB 2.0 port lets you connect and wirelessly share a hard drive and/or printer Three GigaBit Ethernet ports Guest networking for easy sharing of your internet connection with temporary guests Measures 6.5 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches; backed by a one-year warranty

The sleek, easy-to-use AirPort Extreme Base Station with simultaneous dual-band support is the perfect wireless access point for home, school, or small business. It offers fast, 802.11n Wi-Fi access for Mac computers, PCs, and Wi-Fi devices such as iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews 254 of 266 people found the following review helpful. Moron-friendly network of S. Chadwick Ah Jeez, what can I say. I can get almost anything with a computer to make Apple or PC, but when I try to configure a network, but none of the gnomes from work. When my Netgear "lost its settings" on the fly, they were kind enough to offer technical support to fix it for me for 99 dollars. When I was offered, I might even go to their website for help. But I had too many hours spent, when I first bought, routers, I was ready. So I bought this router and it is exactly as other reviewers have said, put it in, answer stick in your hard disk, a few simple questions and it is done. This is how consumers want to operate computers. Complain about the higher price if you want, but I will pay slightly more for things that just aggravate their job and not me NEEDLESLY Dang! 290 of 308 people found the following review helpful. It remains the gold standard for wireless easy By M J. Mccaffrey This assessment will be called a number of products - a wireless network because it's all about infrastructure and integration. I bought the AirPort Extreme to a number of other devices to pull together so that customers expect, given that this type of assessment to be useful. Since 2001 I have the original AirPort (graphite), AirPort Extreme (2003) with the modem, and a range of Netgear and Linksys routers to create wireless 802.11 networks at work and at home. The latter work well in their applications, and this research is not going to get one of them. Apple M8209LL / A Apple AirPort Base Station M8799LL / A AirPort Extreme Base Station with modem and antenna port, but at home, I'm not a masochist. I want my network system to work with my art and I do not want to spend hours setting it up and more time to deal with changes in my system. If we (insured thankfully) replaced our home theater system after a crisis of equipment, I wanted a Logitech Squeezebox for the recipient to add streaming music was from a ReadyNAS The problem is that the AirPort is extreme more in our offices at one end the house and not reaching to the family room where the Squeezebox receiver is achieved. Netgear ReadyNAS Duo 2-Bay (Diskless) Desktop Network Storage RND2000 Logitech Squeezebox Duet WiFi Internet Radio was my first thought, an AirPort Express to add as an extension cable - plug it in at least one appropriate point in the middle and leave it to the network to expand. It was only half the solution, because the newest AirPort Express 802.11n device-centric, and it was almost impossible to get a distribution system for stable WDS (Wireless) with the AirPort Extreme elderly. Apple Airport Express solution has to be recognition that gradually extended to all wireless devices in our house now, the support of at least 802.1 11G, and all our computers support 80211N. AirPort 802.11n devices also seems that Apple has developed an airport link a much simpler form variety. The new AirPort Extreme arrived two days ago. The installation is classic Apple: open, remove the plastic cling wrap and connect through the AirPort Utility, I entered the new base station and network passwords, and had to reboot my cable modem so you can recognize your new address MAC is the food. (I should also note that the AirPort Setup Utility allowed me to see the old airport, while I was preparing the new airport.) Installation took a total of 12 minutes, including cutting the packing tape from the shipping box. The second step was the creation of the AirPort Express. Was to establish a base station password, giving the name, then the three step procedure from the Help menu in the "Extending a wireless network." "The steps are as follows: Click on a checkbox in the settings of the AirPort Extreme to" Allow this network to expand wireless ", to select an item in the popup menu in the settings for the AirPort Express" Extend a

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