This was just a matter of taking out the battery, attaching the antenna, and sliding the
AirPort card in a slot inside the battery compartment.
I am so impressed and excited about the
AirPort Card and Base Station that I plan to use it in my classroom, encourage purchases for other Macintosh classrooms, and use one at home when we acquire an additional Mac.
Connectivity is key in desktop computing and the iMac delivers there as well, providing two FireWire ports, three USB ports, a built-in 56K modem, 10/100BaseT Ethernet, and support for an
AirPort Card. It's perfect for connecting your new iPod or other peripherals.
The second sells for GBP2,199+VAT and comes with a 667MHz processor, 512MB SDRAM, 30GB Ultra ATA/66 hard drive and an
AirPort Card for wireless networking.
A complementary wireless network, which takes advantage of the iBook's
airport card technology, gives students access to Internet lessons from anywhere on the grounds: the cafeteria, the auditorium or the school steps.
The AirPort system consists of the
AirPort Card, which has a slot in iBook, and AirPort Base Station, which contains a 56K modem and a 10BASE-T Ethernet port for connecting to a phone line, cable or DSL modem or local area network for terrestrial Internet access.