![]() ![]() Then you can correctly configure the switch for your network using that IP. What I have sometimes done is create a secondary IP on my system on the same subnet as the switch and use it to communicate with the switch. If you have not done anything at all to the switch it may be waiting for someone to actually log in and set it up for your subnet. You can temporarily assign your computer to the same subnet as the switch to manage its settings if you are allowed. Switches do not always require an IP address and the assigned one is most often used for management purposes. The switches may have been assigned a managed address on a different VLAN. I'm quite confused now and might have to do some extra reading. The place I work at has a kind of messy network in that we have Netgear GS105 managed switches providing ports for groups of desks as the building has migrated from a chicken egg place (in the past) into cold stores into offices, so there aren't enough wall ports available.Īctually since starting to write this I've had a conversation and those switches are on a different subnet to the main network (layer 3?) - I'm not very experienced with all this can you tell? ![]() It provides mine and a collegues connectivity. What I'm trying to do is identify the IP addresses of a switch that is sat on my desk. Now read the latest Mac, iPhone, and App Store headlines in Forbes’ weekly Apple digest.I tried Angryip scanner but it doesn't display mac addresses unless I've missed something. The technology is there, the software is there, the ecosystem is being prepared, and the expectation is set. And it’s clear that, for all the confidence that a MacBook does not need a touchscreen, Apple has been working on the technology to give a MacBook a touchscreen. Titled " Computing Device Enclosure Enclosing A Display And Force Sensor” it details how both primary and secondary screens (such as the ill-fated Touch Bar) can benefit from this technology.Īs always, a published patent is never a guarantee that a feature will make it through to a commercial release… but they can tell us much about Apple’s thinking as well as what’s being considered by the R&D teams. While Apple’s faithful community pushes the idea that touchscreens are unnecessary (at least until the signal from a Cupertino keynote says that they are), many others are waiting for Apple to realise that touchscreens on laptops are a useful addition.Īpple is certainly working on it, with a new patent explaining how Apple can implement a touchscreen and offer pressure sensitivity as an option for the primary screen on a laptop. Given the drive to create a single unified platform where one app can run on all these devices, the lack of a touchscreen on any Mac, especially the MacBooks, is a massive self-inflicted roadblock. Not only are these widely available as options in the Windows market, but the touchscreen interface is also a key part of iOS and iPadOS. One of the most noticeable areas which Apple has stubbornly refused to acknowledge is touchscreens. This isn’t the only commonly used feature that still has to make an appearance in a macOS machine. Given Windows laptops have had this as an option for decades, Apple is arrogantly late to the party. ![]() While it is the newest MacBook, it’s the first consumer MacBook with a screen larger than 13 inches. It’s worth looking back at the 15-inch MacBook Air Apple released in June this year. Blue/Bloomberg © 2023 Bloomberg Finance LP There’s a question about who is the instigator here… is Samsung working hard to meet standards already laid down by Apple, or is the South Korean company working hard to tempt Apple to move to hardware using the foldable technology that it can demonstrate in use? I doubt that Samsung is working in the dark here a quiet nod from Apple on the direction it could take in a product demonstrator feels more likely.Īn Apple store in New York, US, on Friday, June 30, 2023. But before this Apple product can happen, Samsung has to iron out a few kinks in its foldable display technology to meet Apple’s standards." And by the sounds of it, the panel is intended to be used in a laptop, i.e., MacBook. " This week at SID Review Workshop in Seoul, Samsung confirmed in a roundabout way that it is working on developing a large foldable screen for Apple. Mihai Matei reports on comments from one of Samsung's executives around foldable display technology and how one player could significantly impact the market: ![]() Update: Monday July 24th: Looking further ahead, it’s clear that Apple has display technology on its mind. ![]()
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