Jaguar Brings Back AirPort Software Base Station
EelBait writes "I'm surprised that few people have picked up on this, considering how much noise was made when Software Base Station was unavailable on previous versions of Mac OS X. But, as I was reading through the 'and more' section of the list of new Jaguar features, I came across the AirPort Software Base Station item. You'll need to scroll down to the Networking section. You'll also see things like IPv6, IPsec, PAM, and Active Directory." Bringing back this and USB Printer Sharing are two of the many good things about 10.2.
When does OS-X get out of beta, and how much will it cost early adopters by the time they have it up to speed?
;)
Probably not a fair question, because 10.3 probably won't work on anything older than 2 years anyways.
Thats excellent. Even though I don't use Apple, I'd like to see it be a competetor against Microsoft -- even though Microsoft does own shares in Apple. If you want an alternative to Microsoft Windows, I recommend Apple, thanks to some of the new features in 10.2 And best of all.. it's based on BSD!
Free means no restrictions, ironic the FSF's GPL forces restrictions, isn't it? What's your definition of free?
It would be sort of interesting if Apple added IPsec support to the AirPort base station (or at least the software base station.) It was shown a while ago that WEP was insecure, and IPsec seems like a much better way to secure a network, as long as the speed hit isn't too big. I've wondered why no other hardware vendors (with the exception of Cisco, with LEAP) have tried to make a more secure version of 802.11b...Perhaps Apple could lead the way here?
If USB Printer shareing works under DHCP this time around? The problem was that the computer that hosted the shared printer had to have a static IP, otherwise the clients would not be able to find it again.
This gave one of the beautifully useless, undocumented "Type 14354" errors.
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.
...are actually just OS 9's old features?
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
I am a gay boy Apple user, but I repeat myself ...
not being able to do two intensive tasks at the same time...
... Microsoft sold most (if not all) of their shares in Apple. For a profit too I believe.
Apple has a great page set up for this.
Apparently the beta version(s) of OS X had support for serial ports, and it was ripped out.
Getting access to the serial ports, via a USB-to-serial converter, is the sole reason I still boot OS 9. My Newtons need it. My GPS needs it. Just because Steve thinks serial is dead doesn't mean all other devices disappear. The day I can't get at my serial gear, by booting OS 9 or otherwise, is the day I quit upgrading my Apple gear.
I have a Keyspan serial adapter for my iBook. Works great. What are you on about?
I'm running build 6C115 and theres no Software Base Station included.
AFAIK, build 6C115 is the Golden Master. So what's going on?
Not only does jaguar have Software Base Station for AirPort, it has a built-in DHCP server/NAT router for ethernet as well (both are in the sharing preferance pane). Two check boxes are all it takes to share an internet connection over AirPort and a standard wired TCP/IP connection. Isn't the mac great?
Sounds super cool! I work in a company where several of us have mac laptops but the company is too cheap to put down the $300 for an airport base station. It would be nice if we could set up a software base station on each laptop and set it to automagicly turn on when any of our laptops are connected to ethernet. That way just one of us has to be hardwired at any given time. Anyone know if it will work? OTOH, doesn't this sound like a future security risk for companies? Now the IT department has to not only secure the copper but the air too!
...and sometimes it doesn't.
Serial port access under Mac OS X seems quite dicey. An informal poll among Newton types, who either get to use USB-to-serial adapters or Ethernet if they're lucky, shows that access by OS 9 apps running under Classic to serial ports is an on-again, off-again affair. Currently, I have to boot to OS 9 to get access to a serial port.
In practice, it seems that serial port access depends on luck.
n/t
I have one word for you: Brickhouse. You can do all sorts of crazy firewalling and routing with that program, and there's a particularly easy wizard that'll let you set up a basestation-esque connection. I dig it.