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Home LAN setup

Wired and wireless

         

Maxformed

3:16 pm on Aug 20, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Not sure if this is the right place to post, but here goes...

Hardware and misc. - One cable modem, one G3 beige tower, one indigo iMac.

Locations - G3 in basement, iMac on second floor

Best case - wish to have the cable modem in basement run through router/switch wired (ethernet) into G3. Use some wireless setup for iMac access. Will probably be adding a PC to the network in next month or so.

I have some ideas about the router/switch issue - not sure what all I'll need for the iMac and how it will see the network.

All advice appreciated. Not sure what other info is needed to help.

Thanks,
Max

Yidaki

8:11 pm on Aug 20, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Allthough you might probably know it allready - this is all you need: Apple Airport [apple.com]!

In fact, that's what i work with right now while sitting in the garden. ;)

You can plug a additional - wired - computer into the airport. There's one port currently but you can buy a small hub for just a couple of $ and connect as many machines as you want.

Maxformed

8:20 pm on Aug 20, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, this may seem kind of stupid - but what all will I need and will airport work when I get the PC?

I was actually looking at a belking 4-port router and wondering how airport will recognize that?

Sorry to be redundant.
Max

Yidaki

9:06 pm on Aug 20, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>I was actually looking at a belking 4-port router and wondering how airport will recognize that?

The Belkin Router seems to be at least compatible with the Mac. Presumably it also works with the airport ... Review - Belkin 4-Port Cable/DSL Gateway Router [applelinks.com]

ppg

9:31 pm on Aug 20, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've just done something similar with a Linksys BEFW11S4 - 4 port ethernet router and wireless access point. It cost £60 (about $90?) and was almost literally plug and play. I've just got a windows PC and a G4 powerbook hooked up to it at the moment, but I'll be adding an iMac shortly which hopefully should just be a case of plugging it in.

The machines can get a private IP address via DHCP as soon as you power them up, so once you've named your network your pretty much done. I need to do some more set up on the security, but that looks pretty easy through a web interface.

I'm really impressed with it for the price. It does port filtering, port forwarding so you could run a webserver through it if you wanted, DMZ support and some stuff with mac addresses which I don't understand yet, but apparently is a good security feature :-)

>added
I'm just using it to share Internet access though, not trying to network the machines.

timster

12:45 am on Aug 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The Airport is standards-based, so it will suit your needs fine here.

However, when your talking about connecting several computers, an Airport, and another router, that's no longer a trivial network. You're not likely to find a tutorial that will step you through it exactly.

What I mean is that you may be in for a bit of a learning curve.

That said, you may be able to do without the Belkin hardware. The Airport is a pretty capable router by itself. Doing it that way might save you both money and hassle.

Maxformed

2:09 pm on Aug 25, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, found the old iMac wasn't airport ready. And no one locally sold the macsense aerorouter and usb wireless adapter/receiver. So I ended up snaking cat5 cable through the walls (pains!) and went the old way. Whew! Thanks for the help, though.

Max

dragonlady7

5:01 pm on Aug 25, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>windows PC and a G4 powerbook hooked up to it at the moment, but I'll be adding an iMac

That's MY network! Same router too!

Well then.

Wireless is the way of the future. I got rid of the PC and now we're all wireless. It's very pleasant, no wires running around the floor...
:D

Fearless

1:44 am on Sep 1, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I must be an ole Crumudgeon...

I'm "anti-wireless."

Yes, snaking cable can be a PAIN but it gives me the things that I want more than anything else:

Speed.

Security.

Reliability.

(No wonder my kids call me an old phart..)

I put my three Macs and the Pee Sea behind a Linksys router (with the firewall administered by the PeeSea.. sigh) the Internet (and Roadrunner) only see the IP addres for the router and I live a virus free existance unfettered by worries of anybody snooping.