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Its seems to be different pocess while trying to connect your printer to a wireless network with a mac. Is it really any diferent than with a PC ?

2007-10-15 05:47:33 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Laptops & Notebooks

2 answers

Is just about the band your wireless card run on, they're 4 types of band A,B,G,N most of wireless cards supports B/G bands and newly ones works also with N band which is faster than the other 3, be sure what is your router and printer band.

2007-10-15 07:13:36 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't own/use a Mac but as long as the Mac supports (and I'm sure it does) a wireless network card that supports the wireless protocols, you shouldn't have any problems connecting to a wireless network.

As for the process being "different", this just comes down to implementation of the interface for setting up the network for the OS. Microsoft has designed a graphical interface and I'm sure Mac has a similar interface. For referencing network devices (printers, file shares, etc...), you'll need the appropriate driver for the OS to connect to that resource and that resource may need additional capabilities enabled from the default. Most devices ship with MS Windows protocols enabled by default so non-MS protocols may need enabled or installed. Check the network device vendor website for specifics on configuring for usage with a Mac.

2007-10-15 12:56:27 · answer #2 · answered by Jim Maryland 7 · 0 0

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