In the cluttered garage, among forgotten tech like floppy disks, flip phones, and that one bulky VCR, sits my Apple AirPort Express 2nd generation, which was a sleek white brick humming quietly like a loyal old dog. Launched in June 2012, this unassuming router was never meant to be a showpiece. It was Apple’s love letter to simplicity in a world of tangled Ethernet cables and clunky DSL modems. Thirteen years later, in 2025, it still powers my home network as a trusty WiFi extender, piping crystal-clear AirPlay audio to speakers that predate Bluetooth. In an era of mesh systems and AI-optimized hotspots, why does this relic refuse to gather dust? Because it didn’t just connect devices, it connected us to a wireless future we didn’t know we desired.
Nostalgia hits like a warm vinyl crackle when I think of unboxing the AirPort Express. Back then, home WiFi was a battlefield: Netgear beasts with antennas like insect feelers, Linksys boxes that required a PhD in firmware updates to stay alive. Apple changed the game with a device no bigger than a deck of cards, cloaked in minimalist chic. No exposed ports screaming “enterprise IT nightmare”, just a smooth enclosure, a single Gigabit Ethernet jack, and a USB for printer sharing. Setup? Fire up the AirPort Utility on your Mac, and in under five minutes, you’re broadcasting a secure network. It was the iPod of routers: intuitive, elegant, and utterly addictive. I remember the thrill of ditching my desk’s cable nest, wandering the house with my laptop, streaming iTunes without a hitch. For a generation raised on dial-up screeches, this was liberation.
The AirPort Express didn’t just tidy up your desk; it rewired the WiFi market’s DNA. Before it, wireless audio was a niche hobby for audiophiles with clunky adapters. Apple infused the router with AirPlay, their proprietary streaming magic, turning it into a wireless bridge between your iDevice and any stereo. Suddenly, your living room speakers, those dusty towers from the ’90s, could belt out Pandora playlists from your iPhone across the house. No Bluetooth pairing fumbles; just select the Express from the AirPlay menu, and boom: lossless audio over WiFi. This wasn’t incremental; it was revolutionary. AirPlay predated Spotify Connect and Chromecast Audio, inspiring a cascade of copycats. Budget brands rushed to mimic the seamless handoff, but none captured the “it just works” ethos. By blending networking with media, Apple forced competitors to prioritize user joy over spec sheets, birthing the era of the “smart home hub.” Today, with smart speakers everywhere, it’s easy to forget: the Express was the quiet pioneer, proving that WiFi could be more than bits and bytes —it could be a soundtrack to life.

What did Apple gift this little router? Reliability wrapped in innovation. Dual-band 802.11n WiFi (2.4GHz and 5GHz) clocked in at 300Mbps, still humble by 2025 standards, but rock-solid for its time. It supported guest networks and three-touch setup for travellers (plug it into a hotel Ethernet, and you’re online). But AirPlay remains the crown jewel. Even in 2025, with AirPlay 2 enabling multi-room symphonies, the original Express chugs along on AirPlay 1, delivering uncompressed audio without dropout. I stream from my iPhone to it daily, resurrecting non-Bluetooth speakers in the bedroom and kitchen. It’s like giving vintage wine a fresh cork.
And as an extender? In my home, it outperforms many budget routers I’ve tested. Those ₹1000 Amazon special routers overheat after a month, and their signals flicker like bad fluorescent lights. The Express, with its fanless design and Apple’s obsessive thermal engineering, runs cool for years. Daisy-chain it to your main router via Ethernet or wirelessly, and it extends coverage without the laggy handoffs of cheap mesh kits. In blind tests against a TP-Link extender, mine held a stronger 5GHz signal through walls, streaming 4K Netflix without buffering. While it may lack MU-MIMO and WPA3, this device is sufficient for most households, covering streaming, browsing, and light Zoom usage. It is an excellent choice without unnecessary features like app bloat or mandatory updates that could disrupt your setup.
Apple’s discontinuation of the Express in 2018 felt like a breakup. They handed over the reins to silence, citing a maturing market. Yet, the Express retains its defiant charm. While I grieve the loss of its ecosystem, I value how it serves as a bridge between analog comfort and digital expansion. In my setup, it extends WiFi to the bedroom speakers that once played Apocalypse.
The AirPort Express 2 reminds us that tech isn’t about chasing the next gigabit. It’s about the quiet magic of connection, the songs that fill empty rooms, the networks that just work. In a world of fleeting gadgets, this one refuses to fade. And honestly? I’m glad.

