![]() How to use the Airport Utility on a Mac to update Airport firmware But, since Airport updates almost always provide enhanced security or performance or both, if an update is available, it’s a good idea to apply it. Remember, previous to the update being provided, your Airport was working fine. Just because Apple has a firmware update for the Airport doesn’t mean there’s something wrong or that your internet service is going to stop working if you don’t apply it right away. Here’s how you check, and here’s what you do about it.Īn Airport with a blinking yellow light may be working absolutely perfectly. Most of the time, it means there’s a firmware update for the Airport. It does not necessarily mean the Airport has a problem. Or.A blinking yellow (Apple calls it “amber”) light is the Apple Airport’s way of getting your attention. Hope that the IOS devices like the WiFi from the TimeCapsule better than the Homehub and work without extension, or buy another Airport Express to get WiFI in the office.Use the Time Capsule as a network hard drive to store video and music that can be viewed/listened to via my iOS devices/Apple TV/Aiport Express anywhere even with my main PC off (this currently stores all this data).Do the above with an Apple TV box should I buy one in future.Link up my Airport Express to the Time Capsule PROPERLY so it will connect to the Internet.Hook that up to my Homehub, leaving the homehub connected to the Internet so my Hub phones still work, then disable wireless on the homehub.I bought one that broke and lost everything, so now we're on to looking at the Apple Time Capsules. To further add to the confusion, I wouldn't mind a network hard drive. It seems all the technology is out there but it's so complicated to get the right series of devices. I then borrowed some Powerline Adaptors from someone and realised that this whole thing was getting totally out of control! ![]() I now have a new wireless network in the house, which, when anything connects to it cannot connect to the Internet, so it works ONLY as a wireless music player. I knew it had WiFi, but didn't want to use that part as an extender, I didn't think it would work on a Homehub anyway. solely for the purpose of hooking my iOs devices up as wireless music players in the house. in the meantime, I took a fatal trip to the Apple Store, where I purchased an Airport Express. If, however, I plug the ethernet port into my home hub, it then seems to extend the network, but only my iOs devices work, and all my wired stuff stops working, and seems to create an infinite loop where windows connects to my homehob, and then rather to the internet, it then connects back to the extender thing.Īnyway. I can't get it to work properly! If I plug a laptop into its ethernet port I can get it to connect to the Homehub and give me a kinda of wired, wireless extender. Thinking that would be lovely just plugged into the socket by the door in the office, extending the perimeter of the WiFi from my Homehub. Recently, I have been trying to get WiFi in the office so I can use Adobe Shadow (or whatever it now is!) to improve mobile web development efficiency using my iPhone and iPad, so I bought this: I also have an old laptop on Win XP which works fine wirelessly in the house for those evenings in front of the TV catching up on a bit of work. My main office computers are PCs running Windows 7 Ultimate, and one on Win7 Home, all working fine. I have a BT Homehub which is located in the cottage and a series of Ethernet cables running across the yard to the office. I live in a small stone cottage, and have an office in a separate building across a yard. Mainly as I don't change hardware often and rarely have software issues! I post quite frequently in Stack Overflow, but use Superuser less frequently. ![]()
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