TidBITS#567/12-Feb-01
=====================

  Computers breed dens of snaking cables, especially when you're
  networking them together. But before you drill holes to expand
  your network, read this week's feature article for a look at the
  wireless world made possible by Apple's AirPort. Adam also looks
  at how retailers have sacrificed inexpensive overnight shipping to
  the altar of profitability. In the news, we note REALbasic 3.0,
  look at Napster's recent legal blow, and welcome a new sponsor.

Topics:
    MailBITS/12-Feb-01
    I Saw Free Ships...
    Going to the AirPort

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MailBITS/12-Feb-01
------------------

**Appeals Court Upholds Napster Injunction** -- A three-judge
  panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals today issued a 58-page
  opinion in which it held that the popular peer-to-peer song-
  swapping service Napster must stop enabling users to access
  copyrighted material served by Napster users. The Appeals Court
  action follows an injunction against Napster originally issued
  26-Jul-00 by Judge Marylin Patel, which barred Napster from
  "causing, assisting, facilitating, copying, or otherwise
  distributing all copyrighted songs or musical compositions." Two
  judges on the Appeals Court issued a temporary stay against that
  injunction almost immediately, pending arguments from both Napster
  and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), who is
  suing Napster for copyright infringement and promoting piracy.
  (See "Judge Presses Napster's Buttons" in TidBITS-541_.) The
  Appeals Court decision permits Napster to remain in operation
  until Judge Patel modifies her original "overbroad" injunction.
  However, the decision also requires Napster to prevent users from
  accessing content that would violate copyright and finds Napster
  had both actual and constructive knowledge of direct copyright
  infringement. Napster could be held liable for failing to monitor
  its system for copyright violations, as well as for contributory
  copyright infringement. Napster is expected to appeal the decision
  to the full Appeals Court or even to the U.S. Supreme Court; the
  full text of the decision is available from FindLaw.com.

  In a move partially aimed at placating the recording industry,
  Napster partner Bertelsman's CEO announced recently that the
  service would start charging a monthly fee for users as early as
  June 2001 as a way of paying labels and artists, although no
  details of how such a payment system would compensate artists have
  been released. Napster currently claims to have more than 50
  million users, and estimates place the number of downloads via
  Napster in January alone at 2 billion. [GD]

<http://www.napster.com/>
<http://www.riaa.org/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06056>
<http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=9th&navby=case&no=0016401>


**REALbasic 3.0 Ships** -- REAL Software has released REALbasic
  3.0, the first major upgrade since April 2000. REALbasic is a tool
  for building applications: you draw your interface (windows,
  buttons, text fields and so on), fill in the code using an easy
  but powerful object-oriented BASIC dialect, and compile. A wide
  range of functionality is built in, and you can supplement it
  with third-party plug-ins or by calling the Mac Toolbox 
  directly. Although eminently suitable for hobbyists and
  beginners, REALbasic has been used to create some commercial
  applications. (Contributing Editor Matt Neuburg, who also wrote
  "REALbasic: The Definitive Guide," reviewed REALbasic 2.0 in
  "REALbasic 2.0 Gets Real" in TidBITS-493_.) This version's most
  significant innovation is that it can both run under and compile
  for Mac OS X (Carbon). Since the final version of Mac OS X
  doesn't ship until 24-Mar-01, REAL Software promises a free update
  to mop up any bugs which appear. Compilation for Windows is also
  much improved, and there are many convenient enhancements to the
  development environment (editing and debugging). REALbasic costs
  $150, or $350 for the "professional" edition that adds database
  connectivity and Windows compilation; academic discounts are
  available. The upgrade is free for those who purchased REALbasic
  2.1.2 after 01-Nov-00; upgrades to the standard version are $100,
  and upgrades for the professional edition are $150. You can
  download a 30-day free evaluation copy. [MAN]

<http://www.realsoftware.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05508>
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1565926579/tidbitselectro00A/>


**CS Odessa Sponsoring TidBITS** -- We're happy to announce our
  latest sponsor, Computer Systems Odessa, makers of the intelligent
  diagramming and business drawing program ConceptDraw. Unlike most
  graphics programs, which provide access only to the visible
  attributes of objects, ConceptDraw lets you not only access all of
  the internal data that describes a given graphic object, but also
  lets you use formulas to create relationships between objects and
  give them customized behavior. The result is a fascinating program
  - grab a demo copy and check out Matt Neuburg's review, "Make the
  Connection with ConceptDraw" in TidBITS-553_, for a more detailed
  description. CS Odessa is also unusual in the Macintosh world by
  virtue of their geographic location - they're based in Ukraine,
  and were the first company from there to exhibit at last month's
  Macworld Expo. It's great to see companies from outside the U.S.
  contributing so significantly to the Macintosh world, and CS
  Odessa is even helping revitalize the Russian translation of
  TidBITS. [ACE]

<http://www.conceptdraw.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06179>
<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/lang/ru/>


I Saw Free Ships...
-------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  With the push towards profits becoming essential for many Internet
  firms, we've recently seen online businesses undertake a variety
  of efforts to create additional revenue. eBay raised its rates for
  auctioning off items, Amazon announced plans to charge publishers
  to promote books, Microsoft just cancelled a $400 rebate on PCs
  for those who signed up for MSN, and free ISP Juno has not only
  put time limits on heavy users, but also talked about selling time
  on customers' computers for massively distributed computing
  projects. (It's ironic - just after we encouraged California-based
  SETI@home users to cease participation to conserve electricity,
  Juno proposes having its two million users do just that.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06277>

  But the change that most seriously impacts Macintosh users may be
  Outpost.com's change in shipping policy. For the last 18 months,
  Outpost.com has waived all charges on overnight shipping, a move
  that endeared them to many people ordering items that would
  otherwise be expensive to ship. Plus, there was no liability to
  placing multiple orders, since you didn't incur any additional
  shipping charges.

  Outpost.com's new shipping rates are $12.95 for overnight or $8.95
  for second day delivery, although for orders over $100, they'll
  waive the first $100 in shipping charges, meaning shipping is
  still free for most orders totaling $100 or more. The upshot? If
  you want to order from Outpost.com, you'd be well served to order
  multiple items at the same time to waive shipping charges. Plus,
  heavy items like computers and uninterruptible power supplies may
  end up cheaper at Outpost.com than elsewhere.

<http://www.outpost.com/help/29485/>

  This got me thinking. How do some of the major mail order firms
  compare? Long gone are the days of $3 overnight shipping from the
  early 1990s, and I liked being able to order a $6 USB cable from
  Outpost.com without having to pay twice the cable's cost in
  shipping.


**MacConnection** -- Of the other retailers I checked,
  MacConnection had the easiest formula for their shipping charges,
  at least on the surface. Overnight shipping costs $10.98 for the
  first three pounds, and $1.69 for each additional pound, with all
  weights rounded up to the nearest pound. Second day and ground
  shipping are available, though MacConnection doesn't quote those
  prices on its customer service page. Curious as to how it all
  worked out, I pretended to order an iBook and found that it would
  cost $26.19 for overnight shipping. Second day and ground shipping
  were available for $18.40 and $13.42. Something like a USB cable
  would cost a straight $10.98 to ship overnight, $8.40 second day,
  and $7.04 ground.

<http://www.macconnection.com/scripts/shophelp/durord.asp#shipping>


**MacWarehouse** -- Next up in my survey of randomly selected
  Macintosh mail order houses was MacWarehouse, whose customer
  service page explained that the only way to find out shipping
  costs was to put an item in your cart, click a Shipping Rates
  link, and enter your ZIP code. I checked my sample iBook and found
  that it would cost between $29 and $22 for overnight and second
  day delivery, with UPS Ground coming in at $18.33. My sample 10
  foot USB cable was either $10.99 for overnight or $8.99 for ground
  or second day shipping.

<http://www2.warehouse.com/customerservice/default.asp?sel=faq&
Subsel=ship%5Fopt&cshop=#COSTS>


**MacZone** -- Last, but not least, I checked MacZone. Like
  MacWarehouse, they don't quote rates, and you have to put items in
  your cart and start the checkout process to see shipping costs.
  For the iBook, overnight shipping came in at $31.99, whereas third
  day (they didn't do second day) was $24.64 and ground was $12.20.
  The USB cable was $10.95 overnight, $7.69 third day, and $5.99
  ground.

<http://www.zones.com/cgi-bin/zones/zbs/scripts/static/static_page.jsp?
name=helpdeskavailability#costs>


**Booking Passage** -- Prices tend to be relatively comparable
  among these and other mail order retailers, although you can often
  find cheaper prices on computer gear through services like
  DealTime and PriceWatch. But all other things (like price and
  availability) being equal, the lesson I took away from this bit of
  research is that Outpost.com remains the winner for larger orders
  thanks to its free shipping on orders over $100, whereas it's a
  toss-up between the other three for items under $100 if you need
  it overnight. For inexpensive items you don't need right away,
  MacZone had the cheapest ground shipping. Keep that in mind next
  time you head to the Web for some bit of software or hardware.

<http://www.dealtime.com/>
<http://www.pricewatch.com/>


Going to the AirPort
--------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  My brief story about setting up a wireless Ethernet network in our
  hotel room at Macworld Expo for the purposes of sharing a
  Ricochet-based Internet connection made some readers wish that
  they too could do such things (see "Macworld SF 2001: Go Wireless,
  Young Mac" in TidBITS-565_). I started to reply that it was really
  easy, which was when I realized I haven't written much about
  setting up and using an AirPort-based wireless Ethernet network,
  even though Tonya and I have been using one in our house for over
  a year. The reason for my oversight is actually quite simple - the
  AirPort network was almost trivial to set up, and once running, it
  just works. But simplicity, reliability, and elegance are the
  hallmarks of AirPort, and why I now recommend it as the first
  choice for networking all modern Macs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06284>
<http://www.apple.com/airport/>


**iBook Online** -- We decided to make the jump into using an
  AirPort wireless network at the end of 1999 because Tonya was
  finding that using her desktop system (a Power Mac 7600 with a
  pair of monitors) was increasingly difficult as Tristan approached
  the age of one and became mobile. He was especially intrigued by
  the 50-foot bright blue Ethernet cable we'd strung through the
  kitchen and dining room to Tonya's Mac, and although he was never
  seriously into chewing, that blue cable was an irresistible
  plaything. We figured that switching Tonya to an iBook would have
  numerous advantages, including clearing a desk and computer system
  out of our dining room, eliminating the decorating nightmare of a
  50-foot blue cable from our kitchen, and letting Tonya work
  anywhere in the house. But since much of what Tonya does is tied
  to email and the Web, it was important to her to have access to
  our Internet connection, and AirPort wireless networking made that
  possible.

  The two pieces that were necessary were the $100 internal AirPort
  card for Tonya's iBook, which we had installed at purchase, and
  the $300 AirPort Base Station, which connects to our wired
  Ethernet network and enables the iBook to communicate with our
  other Macs, our printer, and the Internet. At that point, Apple
  hadn't yet released version 1.2 of the AirPort software, which
  enables a Mac with an AirPort card to act as a software base
  station, and worse, we didn't then have another AirPort-capable
  Mac that could run the software base station. Although relying on
  a Mac and the software base station feature might seem like a
  great way of saving $200, that Mac would have to remain running
  all the time, and even though my current Power Mac G4/450 is
  usually running, I go through spates of restarting when testing
  software. Tonya would be less than pleased to lose network
  connectivity every time I restarted.

  The first version of the AirPort software was, frankly, pretty
  bad. Apple clearly rushed it out, and although it worked, the
  interface was poor. I didn't have much trouble using it for my
  Macs, but when I tried to help a PC-using friend see if it would
  work with his PC laptop and an Aironet 802.11 PC Card, it took
  quite some thrashing about before we got the PC to work and fixed
  the settings we'd screwed up in the process. Apple has now updated
  the AirPort software to version 1.2, which appears to have
  improved the interface significantly. Since the AirPort Base
  Station is a "set and forget" device, I haven't had any reason to
  use the new software.


**Alternative Connections** -- I have one of the old Farallon
  SkyLINE 2 Mbps PC Cards for my old PowerBook G3; the 802.11b
  wireless Ethernet standard is backwards-compatible with older,
  slower versions of 802.11 like that supported by my 2 Mbps card.
  The standard also allows devices to step down in speed from 11
  Mbps to 5, 2, and then 1 Mbps to keep a clear connection. I've
  used the Farallon card on occasion at home, but there's little
  point, since the primary function of my PowerBook at home is to
  play MP3s, which means it needs wires for power and speakers. One
  more for the network isn't a problem. 2 Mbps is fine for playing
  MP3s and browsing the Web; the only time I noticed the speed being
  a problem was while copying hundreds of megabytes of files. The 2
  Mbps SkyLINE card's range isn't as good as Tonya's iBook's range,
  something I attribute to the iBook's internal antenna. I have used
  the SkyLINE card while travelling with success, though I find its
  software a little funky.

  None of our other Macs need wireless Ethernet access, but options
  are starting to become available for older Macs that aren't
  AirPort-capable. Farallon now has a $190 11 Mbps SkyLINE PC Card,
  the main competition for which is the sub-$150 Lucent Orinoco
  Turbo PC Card (previously called the WaveLAN Turbo). The advantage
  enjoyed by the Lucent card is that it's actually at the heart of
  both Apple's internal AirPort cards and the AirPort Base Station,
  so Apple's software just works with it (at least under Mac OS
  9.x).

<http://www.farallon.com/products/wireless/skyline/>
<http://www.wavelan.com/>

  PC Cards will satisfy PowerBook users, but people with most older
  PCI Power Macs aren't out in the cold any more, thanks to the $70
  Farallon SkyLINE PCI Card, a carrier card that accepts a SkyLINE
  11Mb PC Card (get both for $240). It's perfect if you have a Power
  Mac 7500 or similar PCI Mac in an area that's awkward for wiring.

<http://www.farallon.com/products/wireless/skyline/pci/>

  For even older Macs that use NuBus or other expansion slots,
  Lucent makes the Orinoco Ethernet Converter that works with a
  Lucent Orinoco PC Card to convert a standard Ethernet port into a
  wireless Ethernet connection. It could theoretically provide
  access to older Macs, but it's a fairly expensive solution at
  about $370.

<http://www.wavelan.com/products/productdetail.html?id=25>


**DSL, Cable, and Modems** -- We have a dedicated 56K frame relay
  connection to the Internet that runs through a Livingston router
  and BAT Technologies CSU/DSU. The AirPort Base Station works
  perfectly with our setup, but we don't use many of its
  capabilities. Complicated connections like ours are unusual now,
  since cable and DSL are cheaper and easier, and most people still
  rely on modems. In those situations, the AirPort Base Station (or
  the software base station software) can distribute your connection
  to all your networked computers, whether they're wired or
  wireless.

  The trick is that the AirPort Base Station supports a pair of
  networking technologies, NAT and DHCP. DHCP stands for Dynamic
  Host Configuration Protocol and lets the AirPort Base Station dole
  out private IP numbers to all the computers on your internal wired
  and wireless networks. NAT - Network Address Translation - enables
  the AirPort Base Station to have a single IP address from your ISP
  (either dynamic, where it changes each time you connect, or
  static, where it's always the same) and do the necessary routing
  of Internet traffic to the internal machine that requested it. For
  instance, if your iBook requests a Web page, the AirPort Base
  Station sends the request out as though it came from its own IP
  number, and when it receives the response back, it sends the data
  on to the iBook properly, rather than any other Mac on your
  network. You can think of the AirPort Base Station as a traffic
  cop directing packets of data (and it's worth noting that if you
  have another router doing DHCP and NAT already, you can easily
  turn off the AirPort Base Station's NAT and DHCP capabilities).

  So if you have a dialup connection to the Internet, you just plug
  the AirPort Base Station into your telephone line and then give it
  the number to dial and your login information in the AirPort Admin
  Utility (assuming you haven't already done this via the AirPort
  Setup Assistant, which transfers Internet settings from your
  computer to the AirPort Base Station). It dials out automatically
  when an Internet application asks for a connection, and it hangs
  up after a pre-specified amount of idle time. Full manual control,
  which might be important if you're charged for phone or ISP
  connections, is available through a pair of third-party utilities.
  Larry Rosenstein's AirPort Modem Utility 1.1 lets you connect and
  disconnect the modem manually, and Pascal Werz's AirPort Modem
  Config 1.0.2 lets you prevent your AirPort Base Station from
  dialing automatically.

<http://homepage.mac.com/lrosenstein/programs.html>
<http://werz.multimania.com/>

  The AirPort Base Station can't connect to AOL, and Apple has been
  dinged for this in the past, but anyone who complains should
  instead direct their ire at AOL for continuing to rely on
  proprietary technologies to keep people using the AOL application
  - this is the same policy reason Eudora and other standard
  Internet email applications can't pick up email from AOL. The
  AirPort Base Station works with ISPs that use Internet standards,
  and the responsibility to fix this problem lies with AOL, not
  Apple or anyone else.

  Less fussing is necessary if you have a DSL or cable modem
  connection. They generally come into your house in the form of an
  Ethernet connection that you can plug directly into your AirPort
  Base Station if you have no machines on a wired Ethernet. If you
  do have a conventional network, instead plug the DSL or cable
  connection into the uplink port on an Ethernet hub, after which
  you run another Ethernet cable to your AirPort Base Station and to
  any other Macs that need access to the wired Ethernet network.
  Configuration of the AirPort Base Station in these situations is
  much like configuring the TCP/IP control panel (and may not even
  be necessary if the AirPort Setup Assistant has done its job). If
  your ISP gives you an IP number via DHCP, you can select that from
  the "Connect using" pop-up menu in the AirPort Admin Utility;
  otherwise choose Manually and enter the appropriate settings
  (which you may need to get from your ISP). The main gotcha is that
  the AirPort Base Station doesn't support PPPoE (PPP over Ethernet,
  a silly technology used by phone companies to monitor usage).
  Farallon's new $400 NetLINE Wireless Broadband Gateway lacks a
  modem but promises to handle PPPoE for DSL connections that are so
  hampered.

<http://www.farallon.com/products/netline/broadband/8581_gateway.html>

  Apple's PDF document "Designing AirPort Networks" (available from
  Apple's AirPort page linked above) is a helpful overview of the
  different approaches to setting up your wireless network and
  connecting it to the Internet.


**Technical Difficulties** -- I hate to sound uncritical, but
  we've had basically no problems at all with our AirPort network.
  The only annoyance occurs when printing. Our LaserWriter Select
  360 is next to my desk, down one floor and at the farthest point
  in the house away from the AirPort Base Station. If Tonya brings
  her iBook down and sits next to the printer and sends print jobs
  from MYOB, sometimes they fail to print. We suspect it's related
  to a combination of distance-related retransmission errors and the
  SE/30 running LocalTalk Bridge that makes the LocalTalk-only
  LaserWriter accessible to the Macs on Ethernet. If she moves
  closer to the AirPort Base Station, the problem goes away, so it's
  hard to complain too loudly.

  Perhaps the most frustrating thing about using an AirPort network
  is that it's fuzzy - you never quite know what range you'll
  achieve, since it's dependent on variables like the type and
  number of walls in the way. Apple claims a 150 foot range, but
  they're being conservative in most cases, since the antennas
  inside iBooks and recent PowerBooks can do better than that. I've
  gotten Tonya's iBook to work almost to our neighbors' living room,
  easily 300 to 400 feet away.

  Such limitations aren't specific to the underlying 802.11b
  wireless Ethernet technology that the AirPort uses. If you attach
  a better antenna to an AirPort Base Station, you can significantly
  increase its range. I know little about adding antennas and
  increasing range, though I've found a page detailing how to hack
  an AirPort Base Station to connect better antennas, and friends at
  MacHack recommended Brumleynet Wireless Networking as a source of
  wireless networking hardware.

<http://homepage.mac.com/hotapplepi/airport/>
<http://www.brumleynet.com/>

  A problem that is endemic to the 802.11b standard is the fact that
  it shares the 2.4 GHz radio spectrum with other devices, including
  2.4 GHz cordless telephones, future Bluetooth devices, and HomeRF
  devices (a competing wireless networking technology in which
  Farallon parent Proxim is heavily invested). A journalist friend
  covering this space said that virtually every company he talked to
  admitted that they had seen conflicts between different 2.4 GHz
  services, significantly reducing throughput as packet loss forces
  retransmissions. In practical terms, if you have a 2.4 GHz
  cordless phone and use it near an AirPort Base Station, throughput
  is likely to suffer when you're talking on the phone and using the
  network at the same time. For more on this, check out Scott Mace's
  three-part article, "The 2.4 GHz Traffic Jam" at the link below.

<http://www.stardust.com/wireless/views/>

  Another issue that has arisen is security: most people don't
  bother to turn on the AirPort Base Station's 40-bit encryption. To
  show the problem with that, one group at MacHack wrote EtherPEG, a
  utility that displays all the images travelling through the air on
  unencrypted wireless links. So, if you're concerned about someone
  sniffing your traffic - or even just using your Internet
  connection from the street - be sure to turn on encryption using
  the AirPort Admin Utility. However, even that may not be
  sufficient if you have truly sensitive data flowing through your
  wireless network. A research group in the Computer Science
  Division of U.C. Berkeley found that 802.11's WEP (Wireless
  Equivalent Privacy) algorithm was vulnerable to a number of flaws
  that could be exploited using inexpensive, off-the-shelf
  equipment. So if you're concerned about industrial espionage (or
  the more traditional sort), be sure to use additional security
  measures.

<http://www.etherpeg.com/>
<http://www.isaac.cs.berkeley.edu/isaac/wep-faq.html>

  Finally, as with any technology, things can go wrong, and Apple
  has posted a variety of articles to the Tech Info Library. If you
  run into troubles, it's worth a visit.

<http://til.info.apple.com/>


**Public AirPorts** -- There's no reason wireless networking must
  be limited to offices and homes, and we're starting to see public
  wireless networks popping up all over. For instance, Seattle
  Wireless aims to create a totally free, Internet-connected
  community wireless network throughout Seattle. And in Oregon,
  Ashland Unwired plans to provide high-speed wireless Internet
  access at local businesses, starting with Starbucks and a bed &
  breakfast. Numerous other locations are experimenting with public
  wireless networks as well; some have come up in discussion in
  TidBITS Talk.

<http://www.seattlewireless.net/>
<http://www.ashlandunwired.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1280>

  The Ashland Starbucks may be hearing from Starbucks Headquarters
  at some point, since Starbucks just announced an exclusive deal
  with MobileStar to provide wireless Internet access in all
  Starbucks locations in the known universe (well, 2,500 locations
  by January of 2002, and over 5,000 by January of 2003). In San
  Francisco, a company called Surf and Sip has started wiring
  independent coffeehouses and other public spaces.

<http://www.mobilestar.com/pressreleases/starbux.html>
<http://www.surfandsip.com/>

  The only public space in which I've connected to the Internet
  wirelessly is Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, which enjoys
  wireless access thanks to a company called Wayport. It was
  brilliant - while waiting for our plane to leave from Seattle on
  the way down to Macworld, Jeff Carlson and I were able to connect,
  get email, and browse the Web. Wayport's service is free for the
  next few months; like MobileStar and Surf and Sip and other
  companies in this space, they'll have to come up with a convenient
  way that people can pay reasonable rates for access time without
  having to slog through complicated setup ahead of time.

<http://www.wayport.com/>

  I wouldn't be surprised to see these companies shift their
  business models and concentrate on charging only the businesses
  that install Internet connections and make them available via
  wireless Ethernet. Wireless Internet access could help those
  businesses attract and retain customers, whereas forcing everyone
  to pay for monthly accounts or hourly rates seems a more difficult
  proposition and destroys the fundamental convenience of wireless
  networking.


**Closing the Net** -- The future is wireless. Wires are still
  undeniably useful, but wireless just makes so much more sense for
  any device that might move around or need to communicate with
  other nearby devices. I feel sorry for those people who went to
  the effort of wiring their homes, offices, or schools just before
  wireless Ethernet became readily available.

  One closing thought. Although no one from the PC world will ever
  say this, Apple deserves thanks from the entire computer industry
  for AirPort. As with so many other technologies (think about the
  mouse, 3.5" floppies, CD-ROMs, and on-board Ethernet), Apple may
  not have invented 802.11b wireless Ethernet, but Apple's
  endorsement put it on the map. Building AirPort slots into all
  Macs and dropping prices far below what others were charging may
  have hastened widespread adoption by several years. At first, PC
  users who wanted cheap AirPort Base Stations were falling over
  themselves to make nice with Mac friends, since configuration
  required an AirPort-capable Mac. And only now, over 18 months
  after Apple introduced AirPort and the iBook, are PC manufacturers
  finally building antennas into their laptops to avoid the awkward
  bulge of today's wireless Ethernet PC Cards. Thanks to Apple's
  gamble, wireless Ethernet is here today, and it's here to stay.


$$

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