Jump to content

Mac OS X Tiger/Networking your Mac

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

Introduction

[edit | edit source]

A Network is essentially a group of computers hooked up by cable or wireless signal. Networks are especially important these days, since they let you share high-speed Internet connections among more than one computer. This chapter will show you how to set up and maintain your very own network of all Macs or a mix of Macs and PCs.

Types of Network Connections

[edit | edit source]

Ethernet

[edit | edit source]

Setting Up

[edit | edit source]

Maintaining

[edit | edit source]

Airport (Wireless Networking)

[edit | edit source]

Setting Up

[edit | edit source]

Maintaining

[edit | edit source]

Firewire

[edit | edit source]

Setting Up

[edit | edit source]

Things You Can Do On A Network

[edit | edit source]

Share an Internet Connection

[edit | edit source]

You can share your Internet connection by opening System Preferences, and selecting the Sharing pane. Go to the Internet tab, and use the drop-down menu to choose which connection to share. Then check the box(es) of the interfaces you want to share your connection through. If you are sharing through AirPort press the AirPort Options... button to configure the wireless network. Now press the Start button to start sharing your connection. The Start button will change to Stop, which you can press to stop sharing.

Share Files

[edit | edit source]

Mount a Network Disk

[edit | edit source]

Samba Shares

[edit | edit source]

Share a Printer

[edit | edit source]

Stream Music

[edit | edit source]