![]() Whereas the 2008 model plugged directly into a socket, in 2012 Apple has repackaged the AirPort Express into the 90 x 90 x 23mm case of the Apple TV. So where do the real innovations come from? Apple being Apple means the most obvious step forward is in design. In addition Apple has added a LAN port alongside the existing WAN port, but surprisingly this only operates at 10/100Mbit rather than Gigabit Ethernet which has widely become the industry standard. This functionality was added to the AirPort Extreme and Time Capsule back in 2009 so it is primarily a catch-up feature. Where the new AirPort Express unit does differ is its support for simultaneous dual band 802.11n Wi-Fi over both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands (the 2008 unit made you choose one or the other). Like the 2008 Apple AirPort Express the 2012 model also still doesn’t support external storage. As such the 2012 AirPort Express still performs the same functions as its ageing forebear: it can work as a wireless router when connected to a modem, extend the range of an existing wireless network, bring AirPlay wireless audio streaming to any stereo or dock and AirPrint wireless printing to any connected printer. The cogs in the wireless standards industry turn much more slowly than those driving the smartphone revolution so evolution is the name of the game. The short answer is no… but it doesn’t need to be. The tech world has been revolutionised over this period, so can we expect a similar step forward from the new AirPort Express? At that time the first generation iPhone was still the current model and now the sixth generation iPhone 5 is just around the corner. Unlike Apple’s other lines, which are refreshed on a rigid annual schedule, the company’s humble wireless base station had sat unchanged since March 2008. The AirPort Express range has the right to feel unloved.
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