sgould
Registered
I'm in the UK. Yesterday my ADSL D-Link modem failed to connect to the internet. Wasn't sure if it was me or the ISP. It was Saturday. It was late. and I was desperate so I dashed to the Apple Store at Brent Cross in London.
They don't stock any modems!!!!
Roadworks stopped me getting to PC World half a mile away. So I came home and went food shopping in Tesco. They had some cheap ADSL modems. Lynksys and Zoom. Only the Zoom mentioned the Mac on the box so I bought it. It's an X6 router with wi-fi. Under £30. Came home, opened the box and it had a CD with windows drivers on it and some pdf instructions. Mac didn't need drivers. Clicked on "Auto configure". Saved to flash memory. And it worked!!
BUT what is Apple doing about modems? The UK online Apple Store sells one - a Netgear ADSL 2+. But it has received some bad reviews.
So, when I go to 24 MB broadband, what do I get?
They don't stock any modems!!!!
Roadworks stopped me getting to PC World half a mile away. So I came home and went food shopping in Tesco. They had some cheap ADSL modems. Lynksys and Zoom. Only the Zoom mentioned the Mac on the box so I bought it. It's an X6 router with wi-fi. Under £30. Came home, opened the box and it had a CD with windows drivers on it and some pdf instructions. Mac didn't need drivers. Clicked on "Auto configure". Saved to flash memory. And it worked!!

BUT what is Apple doing about modems? The UK online Apple Store sells one - a Netgear ADSL 2+. But it has received some bad reviews.
So, when I go to 24 MB broadband, what do I get?