Watch. Listen. Share. AirPlay lets you do it all.
AirPlay lets you share videos, photos, music, and more from Apple devices to your Apple TV, favorite speakers, and popular smart TVs. And what you share always stays personal and private. So sit back and enjoy everything you love — in more places than ever.
- Make sure your Mac and your smart or Apple TV are connected to the same WiFi network. At the menu on top of your Mac screen, find the AirPlay icon — a monitor with an arrow at the bottom.
- Jul 31, 2012 On a Mac, you’ll find the AirParrot icon, where the AirPlay icon would appear on a compatible Mac. If your system’s Firewall message comes up, click Allow Access. Then your computer screen.
- Nov 10, 2014 It turns out that the reader’s Macbook Pro is a mid-2010 (#6 above applies), so Airplay is out. Here’s two low-cost alternatives: 1. Buy a cable adapter with cable long enough to reach from your seat to the TV’s connectors. TVs usually have either HDMI, VGA or DVI input jacks, and the Macbook Pro has a Mini DisplayPort output jack.
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. Mar 11, 2020 Apple's AirPlay technology makes it easy to stream music, podcasts, and even video from one device to another, turning your home or office into a wireless entertainment system. Using AirPlay is usually a simple matter of a few taps on the iPhone or iPod touch or a few clicks on Mac.
Watch Little Voice on the Apple TV appAnd just like that, it’s on TV.
Simply tap the AirPlay icon on your Apple device and share almost anything — the latest movies, home videos, vacation photos, presentations — to your Apple TV or AirPlay 2–enabled smart TV.
Get the full picture on Apple TV 4K.
More than a remarkable way to use AirPlay, Apple TV 4K is the ultimate cinematic experience. Stream 4K HDR video. Enjoy your photos from iCloud. Connect Apple Music to your home theater. Even control your HomeKit accessories.
AirPlay 2–enabled TVs. Now that’s smart.
Leading TV manufacturers are integrating AirPlay 2 directly into their TVs, so now you can effortlessly share or mirror almost anything from your iOS device or Mac directly to your AirPlay 2–enabled smart TV. You can even play music on the TV and sync it with other AirPlay 2–compatible speakers anywhere in your home.
Look for this symbol in stores and online.
Control it all with a tap.
Convenient built-in controls appear on your iPhone in apps, on the Lock Screen, and in Control Center — so you can easily play, pause, fast-forward, rewind, and adjust the volume on your TV.
When bigger is better, mirror it.
Screen mirroring lets you share what’s on your Apple device — websites, presentations, spreadsheets — with everyone in the room on a bigger screen.
Put Siri in charge of your TV.
Airplay For My Mac Mid 2010 Update
With AirPlay 2 and HomeKit, you can use Siri on your iPhone to send a video to your TV.1 Better yet, ask Siri to play a specific show in a specific room.
Hey Siri, play
Little Voice on my
living room TV
Little Voice on my
living room TV
A must-see Siri suggestion.
Airplay For My Mac Mid 2010 Memory
When Siri suggests a show to watch — on the Lock Screen or in search — it will also include an option to use AirPlay. So one quick tap on a Siri suggestion, and you’re watching your favorite show on your favorite screen.
You pick the show. AirPlay picks the TV.
Now AirPlay can automatically play movies and shows in the places you’re most likely to watch them. Over time, AirPlay learns where you prefer to watch TV, and can start playing to the TV in that room with just a tap.
Awards Tracking,Band Activity, Schedules, Memories, QSL Generation, ADIFimport, export, Club Log integration, eQSL, LoTW, IOTAConfirmations and much more.' MacLoggerDX can also text or email you when theBands are open or that rare DX is spotted. Logbook for mac. Alerting you to rare contactsor Band Openings and looking up, displaying on 2D, 3D andSatellite Maps and logging your contacts to a super fast sqldatabase.
Your audio. Your way.
With AirPlay 2, you’re in control of your audio. And if you have more than one HomePod or AirPlay 2–enabled speaker, you can enjoy your favorite music or podcasts throughout your house — in perfect sync. You can even play different songs in different rooms.
![2010 2010](/uploads/1/2/6/5/126505275/889978885.jpg)
HomePod and AirPlay. The perfect duet.
HomePod is a breakthrough speaker that uses AirPlay 2 to control music throughout your home — from whatever room you’re in. Together with Siri, it creates an entirely new way to discover and interact with music.
AirPlay 2. Now in more speakers than ever.
Major speaker manufacturers are incorporating AirPlay 2 into their home audio products. And every AirPlay 2–enabled speaker works with the Home app on iOS, iPadOS, and macOS.
Pctv hybrid for mac air. It gives you the chance to watch live HDTV on up to 3 devices at the same time on your WiFi router or wired network.
Look for this symbol in stores and online.
![Unplugged for mac](/uploads/1/2/6/5/126505275/177307824.jpg)
Multiroom audio is music to everyone’s ears.
Play your favorite music in one room and stream a podcast to another. Or sync your HomePod or other AirPlay 2–enabled devices for music throughout your home.
Anyone can add songs. Now it’s a party.
With AirPlay 2 and Apple Music, your friends can add their own music to the mix.
Ask Siri to play what you want, where you want.
With Siri, your music is there for the asking. Just say the song, say the room, and enjoy the music. Siri can also play music on TVs, receivers, and speakers that you’ve added to your Home app.
Hey Siri, play
the latest album
by Run the Jewels
in the bedroom
the latest album
by Run the Jewels
in the bedroom
Take a call. Make a call. And the music plays on.
Take an incoming call or play a game on your device without interrupting your music.
Home app
Control all your HomeKit accessories in one place.
Learn moreApple Music
Over 70 million songs. 3 months on us.
Learn moreAccording to the Apple Website, Airplay should work with Apple TV 2nd Gen and Macbook Air Late 2010;
AirPlay Mirroring
Requires a second-generation Apple TV or later. Supported by the following Mac models:
- MacBook Air (Late 2010 or newer)
- MacBook Pro with Retina display
- iMac (late 2012 or newer)
- Mac Pro (Late 2013)
Having upgraded, there is no sign of the AirPlay icon in the top bar, and no obvious way of making it appear. Am I missing something? I have made sure both the Mac and Apple TV are running the latest software versions, so I would expect this to work. Does anyone else have this hardware combination working? If so, how did you do it.
Thanks,
J
MacBook Air (13-inch Late 2010), OS X Mavericks (10.9), AirPlay
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