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Port forward apple airport extreme
Port forward apple airport extreme












port forward apple airport extreme
  1. #Port forward apple airport extreme full#
  2. #Port forward apple airport extreme tv#
  3. #Port forward apple airport extreme mac#

Moving forward I am liking the BlueCurve networking gear. Too bad Apple dropped out of the wireless networking business, I really liked using the Airport devices and Airport Utility. Notwithstanding, all of my Airport device tinkering sums up to relatively good experience using those devices for networks and Airplay over the years. Unfortunately the routers now sit on a shelf ready for the second market.

port forward apple airport extreme

I found using a second AirPort Extreme and indeed an Airport Express to extend my network resulted in some interference Airport Express as a music player. In this case, the goal is ANY Internet access in the Other Person's garage, even if it is "only" somewhere around 50 Mbit/second.Īpple allows you to configure their devices in a variety of configurations as base stations, extenders, clients music players. will have lower speed than if the same device was similarly-connected directly to the cable-modem. I would expect that any device connected (wired/wireless) to the A.E. is connected just as "another" Ethernet-connected device on your network, instead of configuring it as a "range extender" ? Any difference?ĭoes it make a difference if the A.E. Speaking from experience, I suggest leaving your Airport Extreme in dual band and letting your garage device do the rest as far as figuring which band to connect to the My experience using an AirPort Extreme as a range extender saw my networks speeds cut exactly in half.Īre all devices on your network getting only "half" the speed, including the ones directly connected (wired/wireless) to your Shaw cable-modem? Simple test: measure the speed of one of your "wired" devices that is connected to the cable-modem, then power-off the A.E., and re-measure the speed. I hope your AirPort Extreme keeps you going but as far as the garage, you may have problems getting that 5GHz signal out there. But hey I understand there may be a new faster Xi7 router coming out soon. I plan on staying at the 1Gigabit plan for a while.

#Port forward apple airport extreme tv#

This require 3 different Modem/ Routers and now some pods Wireless tv players. In the last two years I have gone from Shaw 150,300,600 and now Gigabit. So I think there is some merit to rent v purchase at least where Shaw gear is concerned. Even my high performance iMac(2013 i7 3.6 GHz 16 GB Ram with 512 SSD drive) can no longer be OS upgraded. Technology is rapidly changing and while I profess to likeing the latest and greatest there are times where upgrades outpace even my pursuit of the bleeding edge.

port forward apple airport extreme

Speaking from my own experience I have a number of discontinued Airport routers, Shaw terminals and even iPhones sitting on the shelf after upgrading over the past five or six years. Indeed this is the common debate: rent v own. Is that normal for OS X? I come from Windows-land, so that would be a surprise.I would rather not have to spend $120 a year for pods.

#Port forward apple airport extreme full#

To further test, I've turned off the system firewall on the laptop, and I've also placed the laptop in the 'DMZ' by checking Enable default host at: 10.0.0.5Įven with this configuration set (disabled firewall in the dmz), a full port scan from GRC Shields Up!! reports no ports open whatsoever. When I test my application after this, it doesn't work. I want port 9000 on my public IP address to forward to port 9000 on internal IP 10.0.0.5. Under Advanced: Port Mapping, I added a new entry with the same values for each combination of fields:

#Port forward apple airport extreme mac#

I've created a DHCP Reservation based on wireless MAC address for the laptop, 10.0.0.5. From Googling I read that the firewall is supposed to let an allowed.app use any ports it wants and specification is not needed. Note that some computers have 'Wireless G' network adapters, that are limited to 54 Mbits/second. The only thing I could find in the system firewall was allowing (or disallowing) a particular.app file, but nothing about specific ports. Connect the 'uplink' port of your Airport Extreme to that socket, and you can create a wireless network that will easily reach to your garage. I am trying to make ports on my OS X 10.6.5 MBP accessible to the open internet.














Port forward apple airport extreme