Apple Makes AirPort Extreme
January 07, 2003
Apple has announced the AirPort Extreme, taking its wireless access point/router into the high speed world of 2.4GHz 802.11g.
Today at the MacWorld Expo in San Francisco, Apple "Apple was the first computer company to ship products based on 802.11b when it launched AirPort in 1999, kick-starting the entire Wi-Fi wireless revolution," said Apple CEO Steve Jobs in the release. "Today we're doing it again."
The AirPort Extreme Base Station product ships running a default "802.11b Compatible" mode, and will drop back to this if any 802.11b-based cards attempt to use it to get on the network.
There is also an AirPort Extreme client available for $99. AirPort antennas are built into all new Macintosh computers, so adding the client card will get them on the WLAN.
The AirPort Extreme also supports Apple's Rendezvous technology, which lets Macs using OS X instantly identify it as part of the network. More standard to Wi-Fi is the AirPort Extreme support for Wired Equivalent Privacy (up to 128-bit), a built-in firewall, and access controls; however the base station also has an administration utility that can increase or decrease the power level of the internal antenna to control the range, something you don't see in most home or small office Wi-Fi products.
Unlike the first wave of Wi-Fi, Apple isn't alone with this AirPort. 802.11g draft-based products from leading WLAN companies like Buffalo Technology and Linksys are now shipping to stores, with more products to join them from Netgear and D-Link soon.
Eric Griffith is the managing editor of 802.11 Planet. unveiled the updated edition of one of the first 802.11 products that ever hit the market. The new AirPort Extreme keeps the same basic shape of the original AirPort base station but supports the draft for the 54 Megabit per second (Mbps) 802.11g specification (which is scheduled to be finalized sometime this year by the IEEE
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