Motti Shneor Motti Shneor 2 2 silver badges 7 7 bronze badges. Hugo Hugo 1 1 bronze badge. This dialog as of AirPort Utility 6. Fing displays devices connected by ethernet as well as ones connected by wifi.
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All posts by Steve Sande. Steve Sande January 6, Great article! Powered by the Parse. There are several. The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say. Other apps Authored by: sr on Aug 21, '13 AM. Some of your other suggested methods are probably more suitable for getting an accurate list. In the latest AirPort Utility, hold down the Option key while double-clicking to select a device. You'll get more or less the same display as was present in AirPort Utility 5.
In particular, the you'll see the MAC addresses of all connected devices. Option double-click adds an extra tab to the setup screen called Summary, but I'm not seeing anything which isn't available by single-clicking on the AirPort Extreme and hovering the cursor over the client list -- in particular I'm not seeing wired clients.
Or you could use that handy-dandy built-in utility, snmpwalk, in Terminal to walk the table of your device: snmpwalk -v 2c -c public Search Advanced. From our Sponsor Latest Mountain Lion Hints Click here for complete coverage of Lion on Macworld. Apple's Airport Utility 6 can appear deceptively simple and simple-minded.
However, with a few hidden mouse operations, a lot of network information can be revealed quickly and easily. Here are some tricks we've learned at The Mac Observer.
First, the natural thing to do is to single-click the AirPort base station. If you do, you'll see something like this. Image 1. Single click on base station icon. You may, at first, think that the next thing to do is to click the Edit button.
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