Switching Locations
If you travel with a laptop, you know the drill. You’re constantly opening up System Preferences→Network so that you can switch between Internet settings: Ethernet at the office, dial-up at home. Or maybe you simply visit the branch office from time to time, and you’re getting tired of having to change the local access number for your ISP each time you leave home (and return home again).
The simple solution is the
→Location submenu. As Figure 18-7 illustrates, all you
have to do is tell it where you are. Mac OS X handles the details of switching to the
correct Internet connection and phone number.

Figure 18-7. The Location feature lets you
switch from one “location”
to another just by choosing
its name—either from the
menu (top) or from this
pop-up menu in System
Preferences (bottom). The
Automatic location just
means “the standard, default
one you originally set up.”
(Don’t be fooled: Despite its
name, Automatic isn’t the
only location that offers multihoming,
which is described
later in this chapter.)
Creating a New Location
To create a Location, which is nothing more than a set of memorized settings, open System Preferences, click Network, and choose New Location ...
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