![]() Various computers and iOS devices connect to our home network. Why two different Wi-Fi networks, you ask? Well, there are a lot of devices in my home that connect to the Internet wirelessly, some of them aren’t exactly current technology and don’t support a wireless encryption more sophisticated than WEP, so at times it’s best to have a secondary, closed (the SSID is not broadcast), less secure Wi-Fi network to allow these older devices to temporarily connect. The AirPort Express connected to the router share its connection to the Internet wirelessly, creating Home Network 2. The Cisco is also a wireless router, and broadcasts Home Network 1. Instead of sending mouse events, it sends their touch equivalents.We don’t live in a huge flat, but my studio and my wife’s studio are far enough from the living-room, where the main router resides, that when I set up the wireless home network nine years ago, I had to add a couple of AirPort Express (802.11g) base stations, one in the living-room, the other just outside our studios in the hallway that connects the living area with the bedroom. This works great when you’re on a widescreen monitor since you are more constrained vertically than horizontally.\n\nUnless you’re debugging cache, you probably want to save yourself the headache and disable it too.\n\nEmulate touch events is one of my favourite additions recently. The first one I recommend enabling is Dock to right.
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