TCP/IP Over Firewire on OSX

grid computing, network, osx Add comments

I wasn’t aware of this until today:

Customers can immediately enable IP over FireWire and then connect two or more Macintosh systems by FireWire for file sharing, Internet sharing, or the use of any other IP-based service. IPv6 and zero-configuration networking are also supported. Many Macintosh products have 10/100 Ethernet and FireWire 400, making FireWire the fastest option for local area IP. For help activating IP over FireWire, open Mac Help and enter “IP over FireWire”. IP over FireWire can also be used as the starting point for new development, such as for cluster computing applications. Established IP services such as AFP, HTTP, FTP, SSH and TCP/IP can all be used on FireWire to support new development.

IP Over Firewire (apple.com)

Sweet! (yes, Gigabit Ethernet is faster and better supported, but I love having a wide range of devices on the Physical layer of the stack)

3 Responses to “TCP/IP Over Firewire on OSX”

  1. landis Says:

    Nice! Splitting up your bandwidth use is always useful.

  2. Richard Jones Says:

    Sweet, news to me… my Mac will do something other than browse the web. Seriously though, on a similar but off topic I thought the collest thing I had ever seen was plugging another Mac into mine via Firwire and having it show up as a hard drive on my machine without doing anything other than booting the other machine in a transfer mode.. guess I am easily entertained!!!

  3. Sheepguy42 Says:

    So if all you have is WiFi coming from an unknown location, you only need one mac to have a wireless card. One ethernet cable plus one firewire cable later, and you have three macs online :D

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