I've just gone wireless with my iBook but took the cheapo route via a D-Link DWL-700AP. It works great for wireless broadband access but I have a question about Rendezvous.
When I start iTunes on my iMac it detects the shared library on the iBook and displays it as a playlist. But when it trys to populate the playlist with titles, it fails after about 1 min and gives up. This works fine when the iBook is connected directly to my home network.
I seem to recall reading something along these lines (i.e. - Rendezvous needs an AirPort base station) but I'm damned if I can find it now! Apple's site (http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/rendezvous/) says this, "Rendezvous works over todays most popular standard connection technologies, including Ethernet and AirPort (802.11). And it uses the standard, ubiquitous IP networking protocol for its connections, the same protocol that runs the internet itself. Indeed, all of the technologies driving Rendezvous are open and part of the standards creation process of the IETF, as is Rendezvous itself."
Any experiences or advice re. this much appreciated.
Regards
FatMark
When I start iTunes on my iMac it detects the shared library on the iBook and displays it as a playlist. But when it trys to populate the playlist with titles, it fails after about 1 min and gives up. This works fine when the iBook is connected directly to my home network.
I seem to recall reading something along these lines (i.e. - Rendezvous needs an AirPort base station) but I'm damned if I can find it now! Apple's site (http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/rendezvous/) says this, "Rendezvous works over todays most popular standard connection technologies, including Ethernet and AirPort (802.11). And it uses the standard, ubiquitous IP networking protocol for its connections, the same protocol that runs the internet itself. Indeed, all of the technologies driving Rendezvous are open and part of the standards creation process of the IETF, as is Rendezvous itself."
Any experiences or advice re. this much appreciated.
Regards
FatMark