|
Moral of story. I bought a CPU replacement Sonnet too.
Apple's airport software recognizes it and it just works like a normal Apple card.I had purchased a NewerTech card first and their drivers made you locate and find your connection point every time you booted, then the driver sat in the dock. Works great on older Mac G3.
I returned the Newer and bought this one, never looked back.Sonnet gets it. All day long.
It's as if they think their stupid driver software is the most important thing on my mac. No drivers for the Sonnett and the NewerTech card required drivers.
Buy Sonnett don't buy NewerTech until they wake up to driverless installations.
If you have an older Mac that does not accept Airport Extreme cards the Sonnett Aria Extreme is the only way to go. If not, you'll have some trial and error experience like I did. [.]. Easy to install and should find your wireless device in auto set up mode. The card works great once you figure out the "network" maze. Tip: make sure you drag the "Airport" icon to the top of the stack in the connection ports.
My connection isn't all that great (about half the full reception), but that could be due the fact that my wireless router is two floors below me. I put this in to my old G4 mirror, and it worked as soon as I snaped it in. Very simple to install. But my G4 laptop gets perfect reception from the wireless router, so maybe it's just not as strong, but it it works well enough that I don't have to download to my laptop then have to transfer it to my desktop. It maybe a little slower, but worth it to cut out that middle process.
Works good. easy install, sometimes, the data download or data transfer from the wireless DSL router could be better.
I wanted to add my Apple computer to a wireless home network but finding an adapter card that would work wasn't easy. Apple decided that dual processor G5s made after late Oct 2005 could only have an Airport Extreme card installed by an authorized dealer. While searching for a compatible card I found the Aria Extreme and went to Sonnett's web site and confirmed it would work with my Power Mac (works with PCI-X slots but not PCI-E). Installation was easy and connecting to the network was a breeze once I figured out that Apples only use Wep encryption not WPA-PSK and you need to add a $ to the hexadecimal number your PCs use when signing on to the network.
|