AirPort is an amazing technology that makes wireless communication affordable to own and relatively simple to install and configure. With AirPort, you can quickly and easily set up and manage a wireless network to do the following tasks:
NOTE The original AirPort base station, called the Graphite version, didn't offer the same set of features as newer hardware does. For example, you can't connect a printer to a Graphite base station. AirPort functionality is provided through the following components:
NOTE Functionally, an AirPort HAP or AirPort Express and an AirPort-equipped Mac OS X machine sharing its Internet connection are identical. In this chapter, when I use the term base station, it can refer to any of these means of providing an AirPort network. The general steps to configure and use an AirPort network are the following:
NOTE Although using AirPort to connect to the Internet and to share an Internet account is the focus of this chapter, an AirPort network provides access to all the services of a wired network. For example, computers connected to a wired network via AirPort can print to printers on that network, use file sharing, and so on. If you connect a USB printer to an AirPort Extreme base station, you can share that printer with any AirPort-equipped Mac.
To learn how to configure other network services over an AirPort network, p. 941. Before getting into the meat of this chapter, there are a few AirPort tidbits you need to understand. The two flavors of AirPort are AirPort and AirPort Extreme. AirPort was the original incarnation and offered many wireless benefits. AirPort communicates at 11Mbps and is compatible with wireless devices based on the 802.11b standard. AirPort Extreme is the newer standard and offers even more benefits. First, is speed. AirPort Extreme communicates at 54Mbps, which is almost five times the speed at which the original AirPort communicates. AirPort Extreme is compatible with devices using the 802.11g Wi-Fi standard. Second, AirPort Extreme can support more computers at the same time than does AirPort. Third, AirPort Extreme enables you to share a USB printer from a hub. Fourth, with AirPort Extreme, you can wirelessly link base stations together to expand the range of an AirPort network to cover large areas. Mac OS X supports both flavors of AirPort, but specific Mac models support either AirPort or AirPort Extreme; in other words, older Macs can support an AirPort card, whereas all modern support AirPort Extreme cards. The two cards are not interchangeable. To find out which flavor your Mac supports, check its documentation. At press time, all shipping Macs support AirPort Extreme. Fortunately, even though the hardware for the two standards is different, it is compatible. AirPort machines can connect to AirPort Extreme networks, and vice versa. The primary difference is that AirPort networks are much slower than AirPort Extreme networks are. And, AirPort Extreme base stations offer more features than AirPort base stations do. Because it is the newer standard, this chapter focuses mostly on AirPort Extreme. I do my best to use the term AirPort Extreme when discussing something that is specific to AirPort Extreme technology or AirPort Standard when referring to the older technology. When I use the term AirPort, I mean to refer to something that is applicable to both technologies. NOTE Because it is based on the 802.11 standards, AirPort is compatible with 802.11 networks and devices. For example, you can connect an AirPort-equipped Mac to any wireless network that supports 802.11b or 802.11g (Extreme only) devices, such as those designed for Windows computers. Similarly, Windows machines equipped with 802.11b or 802.11g devices can also access an AirPort network. |