![]() But if three passwords seem a bit over the top then you can simply tell the AirPort Utility to use the same password for all three options. As you’d expect, you can set up a password to provide access to the wireless network, and you can also set up a separate password for the Time Capsule itself in order to limit access to its network settings, as well as a third password for the internal hard disk. The process of setting up passwords is also very simple. As soon as I plugged the power cable into the Time Capsule the AirPort Utility automatically popped up on screen of my office iMac and gave me the option of either connecting it to my existing office network or setting up a new network. ![]() That’s our only complaint, though, and I was pleased to see that the new Time Capsule – in conjunction with the latest version of Apple’s Airport Utility – was even easier to set up and use than before. Unless you switch off the router bit by putting your old modem router into bridged modem mode. You should also note that having two routers on the network can screw with things a little. I’ve never really understood the reasoning behind this, as it means that you end up with two boxes and two sets of cables cluttering up your front room or office. They don’t include an ADSL or cable modem for your Internet connection, which means that you have to plug the Time Capsule or AirPort Extreme into your existing cable or ADSL router in order to connect to the Internet. The only minor irritation here is that – as always – the Time Capsule and AirPort Extreme can only act as a WiFi base station. However, the new Time Capsule was able to produce a stronger and more reliable signal that reached into every part of my office – and it did so for both the new 802.11ac MacBook Air and a variety of older 802.11n devices, such as my old MacBook Air and my iPad. I have a deadspot in one part of my office that my standard 802.11n router from BT can’t reach at all, along with another room where the WiFi signal is weak and unreliable. And, in addition, those antennae also make use of a new feature in 802.11ac called ‘beamforming’.Ī conventional wireless router simply transmits the wifi signal uniformly all around it, but the beamforming feature enables the new Time Capsule to precisely locate other 802.11ac devices and to boost the signal strength in that specific direction in order to improve reception. There is an array of six separate antennae housed at the top of the unit, and Apple claims that the taller design of the new Time Capsule improves transmission by lifting those antennae right up off the floor. ![]() So the issue is clearly the update.This is where the new design of the Time Capsule comes in. “Update your router” or “reset your router to factory defaults” or suggestions like that when the real issue is that nothing changed on the router… the Apple device got updated and is now broke. No offense intended, I just see a LOT of. Just because Apple broke things with an update doesn’t mean end users should work around it, because sometimes this isn’t possible. In my home network, for instance, both ISP give my firewall public IP in class B space and I cannot change that even if I wanted to. Tested with four different Wi-Fi network locations where the external interface of the router is class C (192.168.1.0/24, in most cases).Īs an aside, while I appreciate the willingness to help, I really don’t think that changing the router should ever be a fix for when Apple decides to update their network stack and cause the issue in the first place.
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