> Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 14:06
> To: "Mac OSX & iOS Accessibility"
> Subject: Re: wireless N protocol on the iPhone 4s?
>
>> hi will, im not sure, it seems that most cell's don't support the N, but
>> most commanly the b and g c
amp; iOS Accessibility"
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 12:34 AM
Subject: wireless N protocol on the iPhone 4s?
hi all, does the iPhone 4s I wonder, support the N wireless protocol?
Or only a, b and g?
My router at home supports the 5 ghz profile which I think is only
reserved for the N st
Friday, October 21, 2011 12:34 AM
Subject: wireless N protocol on the iPhone 4s?
hi all, does the iPhone 4s I wonder, support the N wireless protocol?
Or only a, b and g?
My router at home supports the 5 ghz profile which I think is only
reserved for the N standard of wireless, my iPhone 4 can
I'm not sure about that. if you are trying to make it a repeater then no. I
think you need to plug it in to your modem. IN my case I have a router modem
thing and there is no way to plug a router in to it as it is suposed to be
portable lol! but good luck.
On Oct 21, 2011, at 8:22 AM, william
so the airport extreme is just another router?
i can plug it in to my existing one and use that, instead?
On Oct 21, 2011, at 4:15 PM, Sarah Alawami wrote:
> The time capsule is a hard drive with a router in it thereby making local
> network backups possible.. You might want to go for the airpo
The time capsule is a hard drive with a router in it thereby making local
network backups possible.. You might want to go for the airport extreme instead
as it might be slightly cheaper.
On Oct 21, 2011, at 6:39 AM, william lomas wrote:
> i am going to look in to this time capsule thing
> is it
i am going to look in to this time capsule thing
is it fast?
On Oct 21, 2011, at 1:44 PM, Thuy wrote:
> I have the Virgin Media hub too, but don't bother to use its wireless
> router. Instead, I plug my Time Capsule into one of the ethernet ports
> on the Virgin Media hub. Hope this helps?
>
> C
I have the Virgin Media hub too, but don't bother to use its wireless
router. Instead, I plug my Time Capsule into one of the ethernet ports
on the Virgin Media hub. Hope this helps?
Cheers
Thuy
On 21/10/2011, william lomas wrote:
> the virgin media hub is an all in one device so not sure wha
the virgin media hub is an all in one device so not sure what i would do.
The N protocol I assume is a stronger connection
On Oct 21, 2011, at 9:49 AM, Gordon Smith wrote:
> Hi William
>
> I can just about figure out what you're trying to say here. But I'm amazed
> that your router won't supp
Hi William
I can just about figure out what you're trying to say here. But I'm amazed
that your router won't support both bands at once, most modern routers do
because it's necessary for fallback compatibility.
Yes, the Mac supports both frequency ranges because, as I said, it is backwards
co
Hi Chris
The precise channel in a manual configuration depends very much upon local
circumstance. In all probability 13 will work because you're right at the top
of the band. If, however, there are other devices such as cordless phones
which use wi-fi it is possible that channel 13 won't work
is that supposed to find it?
on channel 11 at the moment. I don't think the iPhone has the N wireless card
On Oct 21, 2011, at 8:19 AM, chris hallsworth wrote:
> Try changing the channel to manual and the frequency to 13.
>
> On 21/10/2011 07:34, william lomas wrote:
>> hi all, does the iPhone 4
Gordon
with mine, see, i think, i have to set it to either or.
So if I set it to the 2.4 ghz when I log in, I see the iPhone connecting to it,
yet as my iMac i assume has an N enabled card? it flawless with the five ghz
yet the iPhone isn't.
very strange, never mind
On Oct 21, 2011, at 8:16 A
Try changing the channel to manual and the frequency to 13.
On 21/10/2011 07:34, william lomas wrote:
hi all, does the iPhone 4s I wonder, support the N wireless protocol?
Or only a, b and g?
My router at home supports the 5 ghz profile which I think is only reserved for
the N standard of wirel
William
You need to use the 2.4 GHZ band for your iPhone. Any self-respecting router
would work with both bands simultaneously so you shouldn't have a problem.
Gordon
On 21 Oct 2011, at 07:34, william lomas wrote:
hi all, does the iPhone 4s I wonder, support the N wireless protocol?
Or only a,
hi all, does the iPhone 4s I wonder, support the N wireless protocol?
Or only a, b and g?
My router at home supports the 5 ghz profile which I think is only reserved for
the N standard of wireless, my iPhone 4 can't find the network I am on now with
this 5 ghz profile selected, so assumed didn't
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