- Brand : Apple
- Product name : MB321Z/A
- Product code : MB321Z/A
- Category : Wireless Access Points
- Data-sheet quality : created/standardized by Icecat
- Product views : 87591
- Info modified on : 30 May 2023 12:10:26
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Long product name Apple MB321Z/A wireless access point 300 Mbit/s
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AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes
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Short summary description Apple MB321Z/A wireless access point 300 Mbit/s
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Apple MB321Z/A, 300 Mbit/s, WEP, WPA, WPA2-PSK, 10,100 Mbit/s
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Long summary description Apple MB321Z/A wireless access point 300 Mbit/s
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Apple MB321Z/A. Maximum data transfer rate: 300 Mbit/s. Security algorithms: WEP, WPA, WPA2-PSK. Ethernet LAN data rates: 10,100 Mbit/s
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Uk has collected 20 expert reviews for Apple MB321Z/A wireless access point 300 Mbit/s and the average expert rating is 81 of 100. The average score reflects the expert community’s view on this product. Click below and use Uk to see all ratings, product awards and conclusions.
Apple's latest AirPort Express is a multi-headed wireless colossus: Part wireless hub, part wireless audio streamer, part print server. It's an affordable alternative to Apple's AirPort Extreme, most beneficial to iTunes users with Victorian-sized fami...
The AirPort Express is a WiFi access point compact enough (3.6 x 2.9 x 1.1in and 6.7 ounces) to fit in a laptop bag and designed to plug directly into an electrical outlet. It can be used to create a wireless network of its own or to extend the range o...
computeractive.co.uk
Updated:
2013-10-05 14:44:50
2013-10-05 14:44:50
Average rating:80
The Airport Express is not one of Apple’s best-known products but it’s a handy little gadget.It looks like a fat mains plug and it goes directly into a mains power socket. Inside that little white plastic case is a wireless access point – the new versi...
techradar.com
Updated:
2013-10-05 14:44:52
2013-10-05 14:44:52
Average rating:90
With very little fanfare, Apple finally upgraded the last of its WiFi products still to be using 802.11g to the faster and wider-coverage standard, 802.11n. Actually, 802.11g is still technically the current standard, as 802.11n is yet to be formally r...
Zdnet.com.au
Updated:
2013-10-05 14:44:53
2013-10-05 14:44:53
Average rating:73
Apples AirPort Express Base Station has always been remarkable in that it is networking hardware that people actually seem to get excited about. Thanks to an update to the 802.11n wireless networking standard, this compact, easy-to-use device can now...
zdnet.co.uk
Updated:
2013-10-05 14:44:53
2013-10-05 14:44:53
Average rating:73
Dont pick up a new, 802.11n-enabled AirPort Express if youre looking for superfast wireless networking performance. You should consider it, however, if youre in the market for a new Wi-Fi router that offers portability, ease of use and the unique a...
Like the Express Base Station of old, the updated Apple wireless access point and router for Windows and OS X PCs includes a 10/100Base-T ethernet port, a USB port for attaching a remote printer, and an audio-output jack. Apple this week released an...
It's hard to have significant feelings about a router — it's supposed to just work and shut up. But no router has ever just worked and shut up like Apple's newest AirPort — a white inch closer to networking perfection.A fast, $119, dual-band 802.11a/b/g/n...
Apple's AirPort Express is a portable plug-the-whole-thing-in-the-wall WiFi base station with 802.11n. It also works as a range extender for an existing WiFi network. Once configured, you can unplug it and pop it in any...