I'm always so pleased when I find a way round some exasperating computer problem that I thought I'd share my moments of triumph ...

Thursday, 29 August 2013

AirParrot with Apple TV - show full screen

He's right, I've copied in his comment - no need for my earlier complicated instructions ... Thank you!


in AirPArrot preferences there is an option called 'Underscan', and if you set this option to 0% you'll fix the full screen problem without the need of TV zoom


Only downside, less excuse to buy one of the forthcoming glorious new MacBook Pro's that will simply use AirPlay.

Friday, 2 August 2013

MacBook Air drops WiFi connection - again

WiFi still dropping

Well, despite my moment of triumph in the previous post, my MacBook Air still kept dropping the WiFi connection. My earlier recommendation seemed to work for a while. So then I tried restarting the computer, and switching wifi off and on again, which worked, but what a pain.

I changed the security settings on my router to WPA2 (was WPA/WPA2). That may have improved things a bit.

Change the Mac's network settings

For those who aren't afraid to delve into the Mac's system here are some more suggestions,  relayed from macdailynews.com/ .

I chose their Fix #2, to change the MTU size.

Eh?
MTU stands for Maximum Transmission Unit and controls the largest packet size allowed for transmission over the network. If this setting is greater than network capacity, the computer will experience packet loss and dropped connections
That post has detailed instructions, although my screens looked a bit different to theirs. I reset the MTU to 1453, a magic number apparently. Hasn't dropped again as yet.

Investigate your network

Temptingly for those who like to delve into the works, this post also says how to investigate your wireless network in detail. It's getting crowded out there, I discovered just how many other networks there are around mine. You use Wireless diagnostics, on mine it's in Applications. (I definitely do not recommend changing anything other than the settings described in Fixes #1 and  #2, as networks are extremely complex and delicate.)

Move the router?

A'hm, the author does suggest another simple solution - move the router to a better position:
Using Wi-Fi Diagnostics I discovered my wireless signal to be much weaker when keeping the wifi router out of sight behind an LCD TV, simply moving the router away from the TV a few feet dramatically boosted signal strength. Run the app yourself and see what kind of performance boost you can get by adjusting your own wifi network.