I did look up the price of the Extreme, and the Express, but how much is the 
time capsal?

Chris.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jeff Berwick 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, April 27, 2015 12:39 PM
  Subject: Re: Major trouble with internet: Warning: not for the basic user!


  The main difference between the three, as I remember, is:


  1.  Airport Express is simply an extender,
  2.  The Extreme is a router and wifi and,
  3.  The Time Capsule is a router, wifi and disk drive.


  I suspect you can use the drive as a regular drive, but I'm only using mine 
for time machine backups, so can't really say for sure.


  Jeff


    On Apr 27, 2015, at 11:44 AM, Christopher-Mark Gilland 
<[email protected]> wrote:


    I guess, here is my ultimate question:  what are the differences in the 
Express, the Extreme, and the Time Capsle?  I’m considering which I want to 
get.  I know the Express would work for my purpose, but I’m wonderring down the 
road if having the Extreme or what not might be beneficial over having this 
Linksys router.  I love my Linksys, don’t get me wrong, really I do, and seeing 
it was a birthday gift last year to me, I won’t get rid of it, but I just 
wonder if I could expand the functionality of my network from the bigger 
picture if I had an extreme instead of an Express.


    Also, I do a lot of audio production work, and therefore need a ton, and I 
do mean a ton of hard disk space, as my work is all uncompressed.  OK, yes, 
I’ll eventually compress to an mp3, but not right away.  Anyway, my point is, 
would it work for me to get a time capsal?  I hear that even though those 
things are mainly used for Time Machine backups, do they have to be?  In other 
words, theoretically, could I use the storage drives on the device as  just 
that… storage drives?  Then, connect to them over the network in my Finder from 
any computer in the house?  If so, that would be absolutely brilliant!


    Chris.


      On Apr 27, 2015, at 10:42 AM, Jeff Berwick <[email protected]> 
wrote:


      When you go into Airport Utility, you will see an option for devices not 
on your network.  It will be a hexadecimal name (I think) and you click it and 
then edit it.  You'll go through the setup process like that.  Anybody else' 
Express will already be configured, so it won't show up for you--I don't think. 
 At any rate, I don't think you'll have a problem with it.


      Jeff


        On Apr 27, 2015, at 10:27 AM, Christopher-Mark Gilland 
<[email protected]> wrote:


        Then, how do you make sure it's detecting your Airport, and not someone 
elses by mistake?  I don't think anyone else around here has  one, but just in 
case...  Is it one of these things, I'm gonna start by connecting it via 
ethernet, not wifi?  If so, then that answers my question entirely.

        Chris.

          ----- Original Message ----- 
          From: Jeff Berwick
          To: [email protected]
          Sent: Monday, April 27, 2015 10:12 AM
          Subject: Re: Major trouble with internet: Warning: not for the basic 
user!


          I think you have to use Airport Utility to set it up; I do not know 
if there is a web interface.  There is no default username/password...It isn't 
secured until you do the setup.
          Jeff


            On Apr 27, 2015, at 10:00 AM, Christopher-Mark Gilland 
<[email protected]> wrote:


            Excellent!  I'll definitely give that a try.  My only question 
really remains is, do I have to use the utility to configure things, or is 
there a way I can log into the router as well via a web based admin interface?  
Also, do you know what the default login credentials are for the device, until 
you change it, which of corse, I would do?

            Chris.

              ----- Original Message ----- 
              From: Jeff Berwick
              To: [email protected]
              Sent: Sunday, April 26, 2015 7:23 PM
              Subject: Re: Major trouble with internet: Warning: not for the 
basic user!


              When you get the Airport Express home, Launch Airport Utility and 
you'll see it in the list of additional devices.  I have a Time Capsule, so it 
detects my network automatically and extends it.  I don't know if this works 
with a 3rd party router though.  At any rate, it is a simple procedure to make 
the necessary entries inside Airport Utility to have the Express extend your 
wifi.


              Jeff


                On Apr 26, 2015, at 7:19 PM, Christopher-Mark Gilland 
<[email protected]> wrote:


                Oh, ok, so in other words, I'd be bridging making my Linksys 
router carry to the Express, which then would get carried to it's ethernet 
port, which then in term, would be sent out it's LAN port to my receiver.

                Brilliant.  I may just go that route, as to be frankly honest 
with you, I'd actually been looking at getting an Airport Express.  Would an 
Express work, or do I need an Extreme.
                 If the Express will support extender bridging ability, then 
that's all I need.  Do you have specific directions on how to set the router up 
as an extender?  If it's not too expensive, I'll just go buy one come Friday 
when I get my paycheck, no worries.

                I understand better now what you're saying to do.  that 
actually makes perfect sense.

                Chris.



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