Hi,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop, and am pretty set on getting a Powerbook 12" (I've chosen this over the iBook because it seems more sturdy to me, and it's got the Bluetooth, wlan, and larger HDD, not to mention the faster processor - anyway).
I've currently got an 802.11b Wireless network in my house, but it doesn't reach to my room (I currently live with my parents, and siblings) - so I'd like to put an 802.11g wired <-> wireless bridge in.
I've looked at the specifications of the Airport Express, it mentions using as a router, which would be useful to me when I move out (~11 months time), but I'd also like the bridge for now. I can only seem to find little snippets about the bridging mode:
In one of the announcements about the Airport Express I found the following:
I can't really afford to get one and find that it doesn't work.
So, can anyone lend me a little advice? It'd be much appreciated.
~r
I'm looking into getting a new laptop, and am pretty set on getting a Powerbook 12" (I've chosen this over the iBook because it seems more sturdy to me, and it's got the Bluetooth, wlan, and larger HDD, not to mention the faster processor - anyway).
I've currently got an 802.11b Wireless network in my house, but it doesn't reach to my room (I currently live with my parents, and siblings) - so I'd like to put an 802.11g wired <-> wireless bridge in.
I've looked at the specifications of the Airport Express, it mentions using as a router, which would be useful to me when I move out (~11 months time), but I'd also like the bridge for now. I can only seem to find little snippets about the bridging mode:
From an online store:
The combination of antenna and the AirPort Extreme Base Station's bridge mode enables new applications that were not accessible to WLAN access points before.
From another forum:
From what I have been able to find online the first generation Airport Base Stations where indeed based on the Karlnet Bridge and used their software, those are the Grey/Silver Airport Base stations. From what I can tell the new generation Airports (White, Clear) have proprietary software but are basically doing the same thing that the Karlnet Bridge/Router was doing in the grey ones and this extends to the Airport Express. From what I can see on the configuration software there is no place to set the unit to either bridge or not bridge other than to act as a relay station for a wireless network so the unit must be doing internal bridging as well as routing as a default and perhaps a bridge is the solution. Of course I will pass this information to our engineers and if you have any comments that you want me to pass to them Don please contact me via email as before. Thanks in advance.
In one of the announcements about the Airport Express I found the following:
If you're using AirPort Express as a base station, you'd plug your Internet connection into it via its included Ethernet port. But if your main base station is an AirPort Extreme or AirPort Express, you can also use the AirPort Express as a wireless bridge -- just plug it in somewhere else in your house, and attach any Ethernet-based device to it. That device will now be on your network, even though it's nowhere near the rest of your stuff.
I can't really afford to get one and find that it doesn't work.

~r