Hi,

There is an app for the remote that costs like 15 dollars and allows you to control any app, any which way.

Thanks for listening,
Alex,


On 13-Dec-08, at 12:29 PM, Esther wrote:

Hi again Scott,

On Dec 13, 2008, at 8:50 AM, Scott Rutkowski wrote:

Hi again all.

I've just read the manual for the airport express and one thing puzzles me. If the airport express and stereo are together in another room away from the iMac, as long as the airport express can see the wireless signal from the mac, it should work fine shouldn't it?

Yes, I'm not sure what the question is here. Are you worrying about the network access to music that might be placed on a hard drive that has poor network connectivity?


Also the stereo I have has 2 r c a jacks for auxilary so the cable you get in the stereo connection kit, one end I assume is a 3.5 inch stereo jack for the airport express. The other end would need to be r c a or I would think there would be an adapter you could get to convert the 3.5 inch connector to r c a? Finally when was the last time airport express was updated by apple and would it be worth waiting incase a newer version comes out say at macworld or would it be safe to buy an airport express now?


I don't have any insights about this. The previous big jump was the addition of 802.11n connectivity, and I was rather surprised to read about the ProxySTA capability. The Take Control Guide mentioned that now when the author traveled, he carried around two AirPort Express units, because the ability to hook into any network (wired or wireless), and extend AirPort Express coverage meant that when he traveled together with staff they could frequently share the cost of one internet surcharge at hotels, etc. Actually, I haven't read much about these extra features anywhere except in the Take Conrol series. As for the connectors, you can get mini to rca adapters.
does the music while streaming via iTunes also can it be heard in the room with the iMac or can you disable the audio via the iMac and only have the streaming audio heard via your stereo connected to airport express?

You choose the location that iTunes is streamed to -- change the popup button from "Computer" to one of your other locations.


Now i'll be able to listen to my streaming shoutcast audio via iTunes on my stereo away from my Mac. Exciting stuff.


Miscellaneous other comments. David is correct in that the Apple Remote is an infrared remote for your Computer, and only works with Front Row. (You get the same functionality by pressing Command- Accent to start up without the remote, and escape to stop it). In Front Row you cannot play Audible content, for example. With other remotes (including with KeySpan and with the Remote app on the iPhone and iPod Touch) you should be able to control playing within a playlist.

I suspect dropouts or interruptions are more prone to occur when iTunes isn't allowed to control organization of its music library. You can even imagine why this would occur -- you've added music tracks and files all over your hard drive, and you're using iTune's database functions to quickly locate them. But, since it potentially has to retrieve the tracks from non-optimal locations, maybe even external hard drives that are set up for network access and not optimally formatted for the Mac OS X file system, you might get interrupts in the smooth streaming, especially for very large libraries.

Also, AirFoil was originally written for the Mac, and there is a Windows version. (David's discussion was about AirFoil for Windows, so I thought I would make this clear.)

There are other solutions for steaming music, depending on what you want to do. Here's an Australian PC magazine article that speaks about Squeezebox, and refers to the high-end Sonos system:

http://www.pcauthority.com.au/BlogEntry/122536,multiroom-audio-squeezebox-duet-vs-airtunes.aspx


HTH

Cheers,

Esther



----- Original Message ----- From: "David Poehlman" <[email protected] > To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS Xby theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, December 14, 2008 5:36 AM
Subject: Re: Airport express questions


Hi Scott,

you wrote:

----- Original Message ----- From: "Scott Rutkowski" <[email protected] >
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, December 13, 2008 1:06 PM
Subject: Airport express questions


HI all.

I'm thinking about buying an airport express so I can listen to my music
remotely on a stereo in another room away from my mac.
Excuse my ignorance here but i've not played with an airport express before
and am wondering a few things.
Firstly does the airport express recieve it's power via a plugg pack which
you plugg in to the wall outlet near your stereo to recieve power?
dp: The Airport express is actually a power brick with a router in it. It feels just like a larger version of the brick that comes with a macbook. If you purchase the apple audio kit, there is a cord in it that plugs into the airport express just like on the macbook but the cord is not shipped with the AE. What else you get with the apple auido kit is a stereo mini to digital optical audio cable, a mini to two rcas and a mini to mini cable if I remember. I'd have to grab mine an look at it but I think the description
is online.

Secondly once you have used the airport utility to configure the device, I assume you simply use the remote speakers option in iTunes and the music you select in iTunes simply streams over your network to the airport express
which is located near your stereo?
dp: correct, the ae can be only as far away from your receiver as the audio
cable is long.

Also there's no way to somehow use the iMac remote to control iTunes out
near the stereo is there?
The stereo is about 20 metres away in another room.
dp: as far as mac os is concerned, the remote is for front row and front row
does not use airtunes.

There would be no way of using a macbook to control the iTunes library on
the iMac to which the airport express is connected would there?
dp: Yes, if you share the library, you can have access to it through any
ITunes you have authorized.

I am thinking the macbook could be near the airport express and the music
would stream via the macbook and this would also work.
Is there any kind of lag or any brake up while the music is being streamed
via airport express?
dp: I have experienced interruptions especially on my IMac and am trhying to pin down the cause but there is so much running here that I'm surprised it
works as well as it does.

I know with some of the fm transmittors you can buy sometimes interfearance and or other issues can occurr and the music brakes up and sounds terrible.

I take it also while the music is streaming you don't hear voice over through the airport express just the music itself? Finally is iTunes the
only application the airport express works with for streaming?
dp: Correct, all you get is what ITunes is playing. On the windows side, there is a program called airfoil which extends the capability of other apps to stream such as windows media player but I hagve not seen anything for
macos.

Thanks to anyone who can answer the above questions.

You are welcome and let us know if you need any more help once you get the
AE.  It can be a bear to get going wih a router.








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