Jump To:
Technical Q&As: Device Drivers
AirPort is based on the IEEE 802.11 family of standards, which specify a through-the-air interface between a wireless device and a base station or between two wireless devices. AirPort Extreme employs the 802.11g wireless standard and supports wireless bridging to extend network range.

Document Descriptions
On Off
Display

Sort by
Title
Sorted by
Date
Getting a Packet Trace (HTML) ()
QA1176: Lists tools available for looking at the network packets on the wire.
2004-07-13
Generating an NMI Without a Programmer's Switch (HTML) ()
QA1264: Explains how to generate a non-maskable interrupt (NMI) on CPUs without programmer's switches.
2004-04-26
Installing an I/O Kit KEXT Without Rebooting (HTML)
QA1319: Describes the state of the art of installing I/O Kit kernel extensions (KEXTs) without requiring a restart.
2003-10-28
Mapping kernel memory to user space on Mac OS X 10.2 (HTML) ()
QA1197: Describes a change to mapping kernel memory to user space affecting Mac OS X 10.2 and later.
2002-09-13
Power Management; Policy Maker vs. Power Controller (HTML) ()
QA1121: Describes the differences between a Power Management Policy Maker and a Power Management Power Controller.
2002-02-13
IOKit Framework Headers (HTML) ()
QA1107: Describes the differences between the headers in IOKit.framework and the I/O Kit headers in Kernel.framework.
2002-01-15