AirPort Express

This article is about a product from Apple Inc. For other uses, see Airport Express (disambiguation).
The redesigned AirPort Express released in 2012
1st Generation AirPort Express

The AirPort Express is a Wi-Fi base station product from Apple Inc., and is one of Apple's AirPort products. While more compact and in some ways simpler than another Apple Wi-Fi base station, the AirPort Extreme, the Express offers audio output capability the Extreme lacks. The AirPort Express was the first AirTunes (now called AirPlay) device to receive streamed audio from a computer running iTunes on the local network.

AirPort Express outperforms the stringent requirements of the ENERGY STAR Program Requirements for Small Network Equipment (SNE) Version 1.0.[1]

Description

When connected to an Ethernet network, the Express can function as a wireless access point. The current model allows up to 50 networked users. It can be used as an Ethernet-to-wireless bridge under certain wireless configurations. It can be used to extend the range of a network, or as a printer and audio server. The model introduced in June 2012 includes two Ethernet ports: one WAN and one LAN.[2]

The original version (M9470LL/A, model A1084) was introduced by Apple on 7 June 2004, and included an analog–optical audio mini-jack output, a USB port for remote printing or charging the iPod (iPod shuffle only), and one Ethernet port. The main processor of the 802.11g AirPort Express is a Broadcom BCM4712KFB wireless networking chipset, which has a 200 MHz MIPS processor built in. The audio is handled by a Texas Instruments Burr-Brown PCM2705 16-bit digital-to-analog converter.

An updated version (MB321LL/A, model A1264) supporting the faster 802.11 Draft-N draft specification and operation in either of the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, with almost all other features identical, was introduced by Apple in March 2008.[3] The revised unit includes an 802.11a/n (5 GHz) mode, which allows adding Draft-N to an existing 802.11b/g network without disrupting existing connections, while preserving the increased throughput that Draft-N can provide.[4] Up to 10 wireless units can connect to this AirPort Express.

The AirPort Express uses an audio connector that combines a 3.5 mm minijack socket and a mini-TOSLINK optical digital transmitter, allowing connection to an external digital-to-analog converter (DAC) or amplifier with internal DAC. Standard audio CDs ripped in iTunes into Apple Lossless format streamed to the AirPort Express will output a bit-for-bit identical bitstream when compared to the original CD (provided any sound enhancement settings in iTunes are disabled). DTS-encoded CDs ripped to Apple Lossless audio files - which decode as digital white noise in iTunes - will play back correctly when the AirPort Express is connected via TOSLINK to a DTS-compatible amplifier–decoder.[5] This is limited to 16-bit and 44.1 kHz when streaming from iTunes. Any higher quality content, such as high fidelity audio that uses up to 24-bit and/or 192 kHz will be truncated down to 16-bit and 44.1 kHz.[6]

The audio output feature of the AirPort Express on a system running Mac OS X Lion or earlier can only be used to wirelessly stream audio files from within iTunes to an attached stereo system. It cannot be used to output the soundtrack of iTunes video content to an attached stereo.[7] OS X Mountain Lion introduced a feature to output system-wide audio directly to AirPort Express.[8] This allows output of the audio of protected video content within iTunes, and also correctly maintains the audio sync with the image displayed on-screen. Video is synced with output audio when playing the video through an AirPort Express if the video is in a format supported by QuickTime Player (such as HTML 5 video in Safari etc.).

For Windows and Mac operating systems (before OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion) there are a few software options available for streaming system-wide audio to the AirPort Express, such as Airfoil, TuneBlade and Porthole.

History

Models

AirPort Express Base Station models
U.S. model number Product family number Date Wi-Fi standard Features Consumer Nickname AirPort Utility Versions
M9470LL/A A108x June 2004 - March 2008 802.11b/g
  • 10/100 Ethernet WAN or LAN port
  • analog/digital audio output jack
  • USB Printer Port
AirPort Express 802.11g (1st Generation) Mac: 5.x
iOS: no
Windows 5.5.3, 5.6.1
MB321LL/A A1264 March 2008 – June 2012 802.11a/b/g/Draft N
  • Wireless-to-Ethernet bridge
  • 10/100 Ethernet WAN or LAN port
  • analog/digital audio output jack
  • USB Printer Port
AirPort Express 802.11n (1st Generation) Mac: ? - 6.x
iOS: 1.0 - 1.3
Windows 5.6.1
MC414LL/A A1392 June 2012 – Present 802.11a/b/g/n simultaneous dual-band
  • Wireless-to-Ethernet bridge
  • 2 10/100 Ethernet ports: WAN or LAN, LAN only
  • analog/digital audio output jack
  • USB Printer Port
AirPort Express 802.11n (2nd Generation) Mac: 5.6 - 6.x
iOS: 1.0 - 1.3
Windows 5.6.1

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to AirPort Express.

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.