I still run my house on three of the last airport base stations placed around the house like a mesh network, and airport express scattered around the house for iTunes.
I had to scroll way down here to find people that still use them.
This is me right now https://i.imgur.com/MOUgJwL.png
Express are mostly for Airplay, but still serve WiFi.
What’s with the downvotes, this is the way. Rock solid for 6 years with no resets ever.
Aren’t the express models pretty slow if you’re using a faster modern internet connection? They only have 100mbps ethernet. Or is the idea that you use them only in mesh and they rely purely on the wireless n?
Youre right about this. My Expresses are used only for airplay, so the WiFi mode is either off, or set to “join a wifi network,” depending on their proximity to an ethernet switch. They are basically acting like any other device on a wifi network, and not as a router.
I have three of the latest/last Airport Extreme towers, and two of those are the only ones with the wifi turned on to “Extend a network.” Since they are all on ac, theoretically there should be no slowdown to n speeds.
Ah interesting. I still have an express and an extreme I’m not using. I switched to google home routers but I’d love to still connect my express to the network and use it as an airplay device.
I was informed by my fiber provider that my Airport Extremes were super insecure a couple years ago.
Your fiber provider is full of shit.
It hasn’t been updated in years, I’m sure it’s full of vulnerabilities
2019 was the last update… a full year after they discontinued it. They agreed to support it for five years, which would end this year.
I’m glad that “you’re sure,” now please provide actual evidence.
Most people never update their router firmware anyway.
I’m glad that “you’re sure,” now please provide actual evidence.
Googling is easy, but sure here’s a whole list of them
Most people never update their router firmware anyway.
And that impacts this conversation how? That just means that other routers are also vulnerable
Wow look at that, they’re all for non current firmware.
Nice self dunk
I still have my little AirPort Time Capsule tower. It’s been nearly a decade and that thing has been dutifully backing up my data every single day, save for a few hiccups over the years. I switched it from hourly to daily to maybe get some extra years out of it, but man. I absolutely love that product. The NAS marketplace even to this day hasn’t made a product as simple and seamless as the time capsule - plus it’s a great router!
I use Synology and for my backup. It’s been working great for me. Pretty easy setup, though not Apple easy, it’s the best experience for a redundant system I’ve seen
same, w have 2 synology and I still keep the time capsule going. I round robin backups between the 3 of them. (my home LAN has a wireless bridge over to my sister’s house, so one sits in a cupboard her place and gives a physical redundancy)
Definite ‘appliances’. So far they just sit and do their thing, no intervention necessary
I worked at Apple for 21 years in Comms QA and I had good times working with the AirPort base station guys. The tower AirPort Extreme was a great unit and I still have one brand new that I bought when I heard Apple was ending production. It doesn’t support all of the current bells and whistles, but it was just a good, solid unit. Sadly, the base station team has been scattered to the winds, but I memba.
Thank you. I have two of the towers, connected with ethernet. Full coverage of everywhere I care about, and they hand-off wifi calls seamlessly. I dread the day they die…they just work and full AC speed reliably.
I bought two of these with broken hard disks, installed new 3Tb disks and use them as NAS. Performance is great.
You might want to do a test restore just to make sure the disk in there is still good. A decade is a long time for a mechanical disk, and you might just be writing your latest files to the disk dutifully every day while bad sectors linger elsewhere on the disk.
Just saying… verify your backups. And I mean by doing a restore, not Apple’s verify which doesn’t actually check every byte.
It’s usually good to have at least two backups anyway.
I bought an m3 iMac a couple weeks ago and used my time capsule to migrate everything. Worked perfectly!
If they just made a HomePod that also worked as a WiFi router I’d buy the shit out of it.
I partially agree with you. The problem is that the wifi router requires an Ethernet cable to connect to the modem which limits where you can put it.
What would be cool is to have a base station that’s just a router (maybe with HomePod functionality), but then add-on mesh network hotspots that work as HomePods. These would be a lot more flexible for placement.
Would have been a great idea
Would be great if they could collaborate with Ubiquiti about making such devices. Like a HomePod, but with UniFi built in. Or a Dream Router, with Apple TV built in…
If it meant native HomeKit on UniFi Protect gear it would be a win in my book. HomeBridge works, but native is where at.
I have been pleading for them to have all the various wifi enabled devices serve as a mesh network! Essentially idden and integrated into existing devices that “need” to be there and connected anyway…
I really thought that was the endgame for removing the airport series…
Yeah Homepod is kind of a niche product as is, just adding a speaker and siri support to a Wi-Fi router would make more sense.
Maybe as a mesh network, but then where i would place mesh routers are not exactly where I would place a HomePod.
Man how I hate macaddress.
Because it’s a LTT channel?
Now what? It’s been cancelled for like almost a decade, no?
Apple does this a lot tbh, if they want a standard they’ll make it happen then abandon the less profitable infrastructure that others are now doing.
The history? The first airport had a 486 with a replacable pcmcia lucent wifi card. It had a cool 3 leds plastic light carriers
The very least they could do is create a NAS like product that supports time machine. It would fly off the shelves. Doesn’t need to be a router or anything fancy.
People are taking old Time capsules and turning them into NAS drives with the router features disabled.
They’re all about services now, well this would be the perfect addition to the lineup, and a place they can offer more services.
I’m not the biggest fan of the main LTT channel, but macaddress puts out consistently high quality content.
Can’t speak for the sponsored asus router they showcased, but I’m liking my google/nest wifi setup
Meh. Everything coming out of that group is clickbait.
Did you even watch the video? I found it genuinely interesting and learned new things, such as: Apple among 1st to feature WiFi Mesh, built-in WiFi in a laptop, and Multi-Room audio. The video is barely trying to sell anything, aside from the non-Apple sponsor, and the ONE unique feature remaining in old Apple Airport routers: Time Machine backups over WiFi, and these devices are dirt cheap 2nd-hand.
I bought a used Airport Express on eBay a couple years ago. Need it to stream my audio receiver to my speakers so I can play music from my phone over my stereo setup.
Just get homepods
“The best wi-fi router is a 100-foot ethernet cable”
-Anonymous
My airports have been slowly dying for a year or two. Does anybody have a recommendation for an Apple-friendly mesh network? Ubiquity? Eero? Something else?
We replaced ours with Google WiFi and been very happy with the results.
The Google WiFi is a mesh solution which is really the way to go in 2023, IMHO.
I had an iBook about 21 or so years ago. It was the white one that came after those original green plastic iMac looking ones, and it was the first device I ever used wifi. I bought my first wifi router because of it, the classic Linksys black and blue, the 802.11b one, g wasn’t even out yet.
That was the first project I worked on when I started at Apple as a contractor in 2001.
AirPort was a great product line when the Wi-Fi market was new and competing products were clunky and hard to configure.
Now the market is mature and saturated, last year’s $250 router is now $75, and everyone’s cable/DSL modem comes with one built-in. It makes no economic sense for Apple to participate in that market because there’s little that could differentiate their products from others.