AirPort for OS X 10.1.5 3.0.4
Grok Headline matches for AirPort for OS X 10.1.5 3.0.4
AirPort Prices Drop Before Airport
Express Release (05-Jul-2004; 1.5K)
AirPort Prices Drop Before Airport
Express Release (05-Jul-2004; 1.5K)
07/05/2004 08:48 PMWhy Apple's Airport Express May
Unofficially Extend Non-Airport Networks
Why Apple's Airport Express May
Unofficially Extend Non-Airport Networks
06/07/2004 05:15 PMEven though Apple is claiming on their website that the new
Airport Express can only act as a network range extender (signal
repeater) with other Airport devices (look at the bottom of this page),
WiFi Networking News's Glenn Fleishman explains why the Airport
Express may just work with some non-Apple devices after all:
AirPort 4.0.1 Updates AirPort Express
(30-Aug-2004; 1.1K)
AirPort 4.0.1 Updates AirPort Express
(30-Aug-2004; 1.1K)
08/30/2004 10:39 PMYouth 'Hijacks' Airport Bus to the
Airport (Reuters)
Youth 'Hijacks' Airport Bus to the
Airport (Reuters)
03/22/2005 04:51 PMReuters - A Japanese youth who wanted to go to
Tokyo's Haneda airport boarded a bus heading there before
threatening to hijack it unless it took him to ... the airport.
"The TSA Chief at Dulles Airport was
nabbed for drunk driving yesterday at 1
o'clock AM, at which time he was
supposed to be on duty supervising
Orange Level security at our capital's
airport."
"The TSA Chief at Dulles Airport was
nabbed for drunk driving yesterday at 1
o'clock AM, at which time he was
supposed to be on duty supervising
Orange Level security at our capital's
airport."
01/04/2004 09:35 AMAirPort 4.0.1 for Mac
AirPort 4.0.1 for Mac
08/27/2004 02:16 PMAirPort Express 4.0.1 update is recommended for all customers with
AirPort Express base stations.
Airport 3.2
Airport 3.2
10/30/2003 09:20 PMProvides support for the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) specification
for the AirPort Extreme base station and client.
AirPort for OS X 10.2 3.0.4
AirPort for OS X 10.2 3.0.4
11/03/2003 04:03 PMThe AirPort 3.0.4 software release supports both AirPort Extreme and
AirPort products for Mac OS X 10.2.
AirPort 3.2
AirPort 3.2
11/03/2003 04:03 PMProvides support for the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) specification
for the AirPort Extreme base station and client.
A first look at AirPort Express
A first look at AirPort Express
08/03/2004 06:21 PMI'm now at a hotel with wired Ethernet, so I picked up an AirPort
Express to go wireless.
NY Times Looks at AirPort Wi-Fi
NY Times Looks at AirPort Wi-Fi
07/26/2004 11:11 PMAirports are finally getting the Wi-Fi religion, but only 19 of top 50
airports have service; 6 are deciding on vendors: I know regular
readers of this site are used to seeing my byline on any Wi-Fi
obsessive article in the New York Times, but I can't be everywhere.
Jane Levere writes an extremely tight wrap-up on the current and
future state of Wi-Fi in airports, focusing on pricing, utility, and
the lack of roaming plans. As noted earlier today, SBC has signed
roaming agreements with a number of airport providing hotspot
operators: if it added Sprint PCS and AT&T Wireless's locations,
it would have the hat trick. But until SBC actually adds it's newest
partners into their network and signs additional locations, we've got
a pretty scattered set of airports under any given plan. One item not
mentioned that affects Wi-Fi in airports is the airlines and
concessionaires sudden ability to put in their own networks per a
recent FCC clarification that only they can regulate unlicensed
spectrum, not landlords or airport authorities. This report is just a
month old, and I'm sure that airlines, retail shops, and other tenants
of airports are still digesting the decision and beating airport
authorities over the head about it. We'll very likely see a number of
interesting airport options that crop up with that artificial landlord
restriction removed. The authorities may try to keep a lid on through
other methods, but the FCC handed tenants a blunt instrument. (Now,
don't get on me about spectrum etiquette and coordination. It's a good
idea. If you have 20 networks operating in a small space all on the
same channel--very bad. Tragedy of the commons. And so forth. But
etiquette is enforced when no one gets utility unless everyone
cooperates. Prisoner's Dilemma and all that. Thus, spectrum
coordination for unlicensed use can happen ante or post facto.)...
Look Out Airport Networks...
Look Out Airport Networks...
11/18/2003 09:04 PMJetBlue Airways is offering free Wi-Fi to folks hanging out in its
departure gates in Terminal 6 in New York's JFK Airport: The airline
also offers the free Wi-Fi in its hub, the LA/Long Beach airport. If
more airlines start doing this, it will be interesting to watch what
happens to the companies that are already offering fee-based services
in airports. That seems to be a big business, with hotspot providers
signing exclusive deals with airports. I wonder what sort of rights
airlines have to build Wi-Fi networks in the gates they often use.
Glenn has heard from some folks in the industry that airports are
starting to assert rights to spectrum that they previously left alone,
or encoding these rights in new contracts as airline leases expire....
Apple: AirPort 3.4.1
Apple: AirPort 3.4.1
04/26/2004 06:58 PMApple released an AirPort update, apparently patching problems with
the 3.4 version, but the update distribution, too, is a bit confused.
Detroit Airport Gets Wi-Fi
Detroit Airport Gets Wi-Fi
12/19/2003 07:36 PMConcourse Communications built a Wi-Fi network in part of Detroit's
airport: The network will be free through the end of the holidays and
after that will cost $6.95 for daily use. Concourse went through some
restructuring a few months ago, and is finally getting caught up on
its contracted airports. It's had Detroit under contracts for years,
and the three New York/New Jersey airports (JFK, LaGuardia, and
Newark) are about to get fully built out as well instead of the
partial service now available....
Airport Software v3.3.1
Airport Software v3.3.1
03/06/2004 02:02 AM
In your Software Update: The AirPort 3.3.1 Update improves the
reliability of AirPort connections when changing network locations.
The update is reco...
Airport 3.4 Problems
Airport 3.4 Problems
04/21/2004 05:01 PMApple's new Airport Extreme 3.4 update has very definite problems with
loss of signal strength and dropping connections. If you haven't
installed it, don't do it. If you've already installed it,
xlr8yourmac has an article that tells how to revert to
3.3.1.
Two Airport Extremes
Two Airport Extremes
04/21/2004 05:14 PMI just read Adam Greenfield's rant on the non-ease of use that he
encountered when attempting to setup an Airport... (656 words)
AirPort Update 3.4.1
AirPort Update 3.4.1
04/26/2004 05:19 PMApple has released an
AirPo
rt 3.4.1 software update. No information about what's new in
3.4.1, but I suspect it addresses the signal strength problems. In any
case, I recommend waiting a few days before installing it if you're
not running 3.4.
Misoverheard at the airport...
Misoverheard at the airport...
06/24/2004 08:28 AM Mark in a comment sends us to Kiss This Guy, a site that aggregates
misheard lyrics (kiss this guy = kiss the sky). Which reminds me of
something I heard at the Seattle airport yesterday... Two parents
where shepherding their 8-yr-old daughter through the long "security"
line. The parents took off their shoes and the girl started
laboriously to unbuckle hers. "Does she have to take off hers?" the
father asked the security guy. "Children are exempt," he said with a
slight Southern accent. Still the girl insisted on taking off her
shoes. After urging her not to a...
A First Take On AirPort Express
A First Take On AirPort Express
06/07/2004 06:48 PMI suspect AirPort Express will really shine as an additional wireless
product.
By Jason Snell, Macworld (via MyAppleMenu)
Airport Software 3.3
Airport Software 3.3
01/26/2004 09:50 PM
Apple released Airport Software 3.3 today:This software update
provides improved AirPort wireless networking software, and is
recommended for all user...
AirPort Express
AirPort Express
06/07/2004 08:29 PMApple's
AirPort
Express looks like a good product, but it seems to be suffering
from a case of over-integration (i.e. it does too many things). I
think it would help if Apple gave a set of use cases (with pictures).
Savannah Airport Gets Wi-Fi
Savannah Airport Gets Wi-Fi
01/22/2004 02:13 AMAirport Network Services, a subsidiary of ICOA, built a Wi-Fi network
covering the entire Savannah/Hilton Head airport: I was there about a
year ago and it's a small but really nice airport. Visitors can use
the network for $6.95 per day. It seems like more small airports like
this one are building Wi-Fi networks that can be used by visitors but
also airport workers....
Airport Software v3.4.1
Airport Software v3.4.1
04/26/2004 11:02 PM
In your software update:This software update provides improved AirPort
wireless networking software, and is recommended for all users with an
AirPort ...
Is It Against The Law To Put The Name Of
The Toronto Airport On The Web?
Is It Against The Law To Put The Name Of
The Toronto Airport On The Web?
11/13/2003 05:16 PMSometimes you have to wonder about folks who are very quick to dash
off legal threats to websites that happen to mention their name. The
site
Urinal.net is a (surprisingly)
popular website posting pictures of urinals from around the world.
They were recently profiled in the Wall Street Journal and on BBC
radio
among others. The
site has hundreds of fans who regularly submit pictures of urinals
they take from locations all over the world. Basically, it's the sort
of bizarre, but amusing, site that makes the internet fun. Not
everyone seems to get the fun part, though. Someone from the Greater
Toronto Airports Authority (the GTAA) happened to find a page on the
site that includes two completely normal photos of urinals from the
Toronto Lester B. Pearson International Airport, and decided that this
must be illegal. They've sent
an email threatening legal
action against the site if they did not remove the name of the
airport from the site. The site's owners complied, but were clear to
mention that the GTAA had muted them. In response, the GTAA has also
told them they cannot even mention the GTAA. Again, the site has
complied in
very amusing
fashion. The description of the airport now reads: "The [facility
in question] - covering 1,792 hectares (4,430 acres) - has been
[Canada's largest city's] main international [aircraft take-off and
landing facility] since 1939 when it was first known as Malton
[facility]." They also note that the "Gee-Tee-Aye-Aye" forbids them
from naming the actual airport. It makes you wonder, on what legal
authority the GTAA is claiming you cannot name their organization or
their airports. It's not likely that anyone is going to be confused
into believing that
urinal.net is the official website of the
Toronto Lester B. Pearson International Airport. These days, people
seem very quick to pull out legal threats any time anyone so much as
mentions their name on a website.
Tom at the airport [Flickr]
Tom at the airport [Flickr]
04/09/2005 07:27 AMAirPort Update 3.2
AirPort Update 3.2
11/04/2003 04:49 PMProvides support for the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) specification
for the AirPort Extreme base station and client.
I Love My AirPort Again
I Love My AirPort Again
03/29/2005 08:06 PMIs the AirPort Express perfect? No, certainly not, but it comes as
close to perfect as an 802.11 access point can. By Francois Joseph de
Kermadec, O'Reilly Network
AirPort Software 3.2
AirPort Software 3.2
10/30/2003 09:22 PM
In Mac OS X Software Update:
This software update provides improved AirPort wireless networking
software, and is recommended for all users with an ...
How To Sleep in an Airport
How To Sleep in an Airport
02/01/2005 10:14 PMYou've made your reservations, you've turned up on time, you've taken
your shoes off when the nice security people asked you to, you've
provided your id, your ticket, and a...
Airport Security
Airport Security
03/13/2003 10:17 AMCory's account about acquiring "contraband" at the airport's gift shop
caused me to recall a little non-incident that happened on...
New AirPort Express with AirTunes
New AirPort Express with AirTunes
06/07/2004 03:59 PMPresenting AirPort Express. Featuring AirTunes for playing your iTunes
music wirelessly on your home stereo or powered speakers, AirPort
Express brings not only the Internet but your music to wherever in
your home you like to enjoy them most — whether you use a Mac or
Windows PC. Unmatched in its ease of use, it delivers data rates up to
54 megabits per second, fits in the palm of your hand so you can take
it wherever you go — and it costs just $129.
AirPort Express + AirTunes
AirPort Express + AirTunes
06/07/2004 03:44 PMNew today from Apple: AirPort Express and AirTunes. Tom and I have
already come up with reasons to purchase about...
Apple: AirPort Express
Apple: AirPort Express
06/07/2004 02:19 PMApple previews a compact $129 AirPort base that includes audio support
(via "AirTunes", which will require iTunes 4.6) and a USB printer
port.
Apple - AirPort Express
Apple - AirPort Express
06/07/2004 02:09 PMAirPort Express and Airtunes .. Apple - AirPort Express .. we want
one
apple.com/airportexpress
track this
site | 8 links
Airport Software 3.4 update available
Airport Software 3.4 update available
04/19/2004 08:27 AMApple today released Airport Software 3.4 via the Software Update
preference pane...
Secrets: AirPort Dynamics
Secrets: AirPort Dynamics
03/30/2005 05:43 PMWhichever way you do it, customizing the DHCP configuration inside
your network can solve a multitude of problems—just be careful
that doing so doesn’t get you kicked off your ISP.
Airport scanners keep it anonymous
Airport scanners keep it anonymous
03/14/2005 06:23 PMZDNet Mar 14 2005 10:06PM GMT
Apple's AirPort Express
Apple's AirPort Express
06/07/2004 10:23 PMApple introduced today the new
AirPort Express
wireless doodad. The AirPort Express (can I call it the APE for
short?) is a little white wall-wart-sized brick that can be used for
several things, most notably streaming your iTunes music -- mp3, CD,
or Internet Radio -- wirelessly from your Mac to your home stereo.
That's called AirTunes.
Enjoy your iTunes music library in virtually any room of your house.
Share a single broadband Internet connection and USB printer without
inconvenient and obtrusive cables. Create an instant wireless network
on the go. Extend the range of your current wireless network. How many
devices do you need to do all this? Just one.
In typical Apple fashion, the APE is simple and straight to the
point, and will be an attractive option for a wide variety of users,
because it can do a wide variety of things and because it's very
portable. It's based on the 802.11g wireless standard, and should work
with just about any 802.11g hardware out there, not just Apple's own.
Sounds like it will even work with the Winders version of iTunes.
Priced at $129. I think I can swing that!
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Grok Description matches for AirPort for OS X 10.1.5 3.0.4
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AirPort for OS X 10.1.5 3.0.4