Makes sense. I have the G router. Luckily it does not happen very often.

On Thu, Apr 14, 2011 at 11:12 AM, Lee Larson <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Apr 14, 2011, at 11:00 AM, Bill Rising wrote:
>
> > Ok. Now I'm stumped, because rebooting the computer made everything hunky
> dory (without changing the network connection), yet turning the Airport on
> and off (to regrab a connection) did nothing. Even changing from the 5GHz to
> regular frequency did no good. The one thing that fixed the problem was the
> reboot. Why would that be?
>
> A few years ago I had exactly this same problem off and on and I finally
> decided it was caused by my router (Netgear or Belkin, I've forgotten). It
> drove me crazy for months, until I read that the older G and N routers made
> before N was standardized had compatibility problems with some Apple
> machines because the router maker guessed wrong about the final standard and
> Apple's stack was pretty finicky. I upgraded to an Airport Extreme and all
> has been well.
>
>
>
>
>
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