Ahh, okay. That's a clearer explanation.
In this case, you're correct. Finder's handling of lost connections is very poor. Most of the time, Explorer isn't all that much better, b…
Quote:
Originally Posted by ism
Seeing as how Apple's marketing speak implies OSX should do this, does anyone have any experience of this ever working?
Yes, I use it all th…
Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Bosell
I am saying that I can log into a windows domain, disable wireless, plug in a network cable,
Try not disabling the wireless, it sh…
Finder is still a POS when it comes to lost network connections. It completely freezes for about a minute until it pops up the "OMG THIS DRIVE IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE!1!!!1" dialog.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tyler McAdams
What kind of machine are you using?
I have a powerbook 1.67, and an iBook 900mhz. It is definitely a problem with the OS/Finder s…
If it was the Finder relaunching the Finder should cure it. It doesn't. Something that's communicating with the Finder is allowing it to happen while the Finder doesn't allow any s…
I have a 1GHz Ti and am trying to connect to our WLAN at school. We just got a brand new Cisco key server which oversees the connects to the base stations, and requires both LEAP &…
So I have a TiBook which I bought a Belkin PCMCIA wireless card for. Because I initially couldn't get the card to work I took it the Apple store where the genious got my Mac to r…
Try changing the "By default, join" selection to "A specific network", type in the SSID of your network, the WEP or WPA key as applicable, and you should be set.
I did as you said, no change.
Question: This wireless card I have is an 802.11g while my basestation and eMac are using 802.11b My understanding was that g is backwards compati…
Well I'm not sure what the issue was, or what that AirPort icon meant (above) but after a reset and running an Apple Update I seem to be right with the gods once again. Let's hope…
Glad it worked. I still have random issues on a 12" PowerBook where it will periodically not find my wireless network (even with SSID broadcasting turned on). Others have reported …
I'm having trouble connecting to an 802.11a access point with my AirPort Extreme card in my MBP. Has anyone else had success? I'm pretty sure the radio is on and working on the n…
802.11A is a very different thing from B and G; it operates on a completely different frequency band and with different wireless protocols. I don't think there's an AirPort-brande…
Here's a quote from the manual:
"How AirPort Provides Wireless Internet Access
With AirPort Extreme technology, your MacBook Pro makes a wireless connection to an
AirPort Express…
Ok, thanks. Maybe someone else will have more information. Later in the manual they talk about it being an a/b/g MiniPCIe card too. Speculation is that it was easy to get this f…
I think Intel makes that card too; I've seen other Intel bundled a/b/g mini-PCI cards, so a mini-PCIe card would just need a different bus interface and they'd be done.
I read in an article yesterday (tried to find the link but could not) that there is some question as to whether or not the .a talk is an accident or if it might work. Apparently n…
Yeah, I bought two access points to try to get out of the busy 2GHz spectrum and allow this machine to be in full-speed mode while the B has similar channels running. I hope we ca…
Intel includes their 3945ABG miniPCI card in the Centrino Duo bundle (Core Duo + 945PM + 3945ABG).
Example from their price list: T2500 (2M L2 cache 2 GHz 667 MHz FSB) w/ Intel 945…