Ipad adapter which does both ethernet and HDMI out?
In message <300920111204491766%nospam@nospam.invalid>
nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid> wrote:
> In article <q1ob87tl8vl1r0l7fgdqutnleders3onlr@4ax.com>, Peter
> <nospam@nospam9876.com> wrote:
>> >You could buy an inexpensive 802.11n router, connect it via ethernet to
>> >your current router, and connect the iPad to it via WiFi.
>>
>> Which routers are known to work 100% with the Ipad?
> all of them. the ipad has standard 802.11a/b/g/n, including 5 ghz n.
>> I find that Draytek and Linksys products, which work with everything
>> else, get upset by the Ipad.
> nonsense. i have several linksys routers and they work just fine. also,
> linksys and cisco routers (same company) are frequently used for public
> wifi hotspots and i've yet to have any problem there either.
I use Netgear at home and Linksys at my favorite coffee shop. No
problems. In fact, I basically have zero problems with any wifi on my
iPad or Mac laptops.
>> My Draytek routers get their wifi subsystem crashed by the Ipad,
>> though not right away.
> sounds like a bug in the draytek. there really isn't any way that an
> external device can crash a wifi router (other than something like a
> denial of service attack).
>> Linksys routers (we have a couple which act as ethernet to wifi
>> bridges) cause other problems. One of them, configured for WEP (for
>> reasons I won't go into) crashes the Ipad and the Ipad has to be
>> turned off and back on (otherwise it cannot see any wifi access
>> points, including a WPA one). The other one, WPA, the Ipad cannot
>> connect to in the usual way i.e. simply by entering the key at the
>> prompt; I finally managed it by creating a wifi connection manually
>> and entering both the SSID and the WPA password.
> linksys makes zillions of different models with many different firmware
> revisions plus the various third party options (e.g., dd-wrt), so it
> wouldn't surprise me in the least if it's a router or configuration
> issue. in other words, it's not the ipad.
And there is no justifiable reason for using WEP. Chances are your
routers are in desperate need of firmware updates.
> linksys is a very popular brand, and if there really was a problem with
> ipads not working with linksys there would be numerous reports, yet
> this is the first i've heard of any such issue.
Back in the iBook days I did have problems with some Linksys routers not
allowing Macs to connect to authenticated wifi. But that was years and
years ago.
>> I have never seen such problems with wifi as I have seen with the
>> Ipad2, and the Iphone4 (latest software in both) does exactly the same
>> thing.
> i've never seen such problems as the various ones you seem to have.
3 ipads, 4 iphone, 2 ipod touches, ibook, macbook pro, mini. Never have
problems signing in to wifi, authenticated or not. And they are all on
wifi multiple times a day (well, the mini isn't, but it's been on 4-5
wifi networks in the year I've had it)
--
Mirrors contain infinity. Infinity contains more things than you think.
Everything, for a start. Including hunger. Because there's a million
billion images, but only one soul to go around. --Witches Abroad
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