- #MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION HOW TO#
- #MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION MAC OS X#
- #MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION PASSWORD#
- #MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION MAC#
WARNING: Accessing shares over the Internet using either AFP or SMB outside of a VPN tunnel would be considered unsecured and is NOT recommended!
#MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION PASSWORD#
The user name can be anything you like the password should be the disk password for your base station.
Another option would be to use a different DDNS service provider, like Dynu. If you use DynDNS, you still will have two choices: 1) Use a DynDNS client on a computer running on your local network to provide the updates, or 2) Replace the AirPort base station with another manufacturer's product that has native DDNS support. NOTE: The DDNS-provider DynDNS, used in the setup example below, no longer supports AirPort base stations running firmware 7.6.1+ or AirPort Utility 6.1+.
#MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION MAC#
Take Control Books: Take Control of Back to My Mac.Apple Support Article HT203907: Get help using Back to My Mac.Apple Support Article HT204618 - Set up and use Back to My Mac.
#MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION HOW TO#
#MAC AIRPORT UTILITY LOCATION MAC OS X#
Under Mac OS X 10.3, a new keyboard shortcut in the Finder was added to provide instant access to the Utilities folder.