![]() Does this ebook cover Back-to-My-Mac access to drives attached to an AirPort/Time Capsule base station? Or how to configure a base station via a remote Back-to-My-Mac connection? Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard and 10.6 Snow Leopard. Which versions of Mac OS X does this ebook cover? So, you might be better off going with the iCloud version of MobileMe and an iCloud account. MobileMe, however, will be discontinued in June 2012. I removed all references to these options.ĭo I need a MobileMe account to set up Back to My Mac?įor the purposes of this ebook, the answer is yes. Unfortunately, despite some success in testing, I’ve been unable to make these techniques work consistently, and Apple doesn’t officially support anything but public IP addresses and automatic port mapping. Version 1.0 claimed you could make Back to My Mac work with manual port mapping or default host exposure.I added brief information about revoking digital certificates.The book now refers only to MobileMe, the service from Apple that replaced.Here is a list of the most important changes: I’ve enhanced my discussion of how to Revoke Certificates via Me.com.See Enable Wake on Demand in Snow Leopard for details. ![]() ![]() In Snow Leopard, Apple added a new Wake on Demand feature, which-if you have the right hardware-makes it easy to wake up a sleeping Mac for remote access.Back to My Mac was added as a so-called MobileMe feature in the AirPort Extreme Base Station and Time Capsule so you can Access Base Station Hard Drives.Snow Leopard didn’t change how Back to My Mac works, but many cosmetic details in the interface are different.This version contains updates for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (but still covers 10.5 Leopard), and it documents the addition of Back to My Mac support for drives inside or attached to Apple base stations: ![]()
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