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If I go wireless, it really won't slow me down? I hate slow computers. (Boy, I'm sounding like a bundle of joy tonight!) |
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It's a personality flaw when dealing with computers, but works pretty well when dealing with opposing counsel. But if I do this wireless networky thing, do I just coninue to send the broadband through the one terminal now or do I hook up the broadband to all the terminals? I know the folks doing the wiring in the house put hook-ups in almost every room. |
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And, it's always a fucking personality flaw. It's just that you don't care when it's only your clients' interests that are compromised. |
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Ah, Fringie, it is always a pleasure talking to you when I'm in a quasi-black mood. Point Taken. I'm really not as impatient with legal things, and the opposing counsel bit was a joke, but phone support really does drive me batty. As a matter of fact, anything relating to the telephone while at home drives me batty - I get away from work and just want to not hear a phone ring. So, I'm painfully resistant to the helpful people from Dell. |
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ETA note that the above represents a massive effort to grit my teeth and be nice and helpful. |
Blu Ray
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Originally posted by Flinty_McFlint Au contraire, I bought the an(nu)al pass. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote:
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computer-> computer->router->cable modem->world computer-> Routers can be either wired or wireless, and most wireless will also serve as wired routers as well. Even a basic wireless router (802.11b, as opposed to g or a) is several times faster than normal home broadband connections (11Mb/sec vs. 2-3 Mb/sec for cable). I'd still get g at this point because the additional cost is very marginal, and you'll get greater capacity down the road and on the road. If you notice any slowdown, it's on the pipe going out of the house. Two computers would only see a slowdown if they were simultaneously downloading high definition video. Four or five on one cable modem might notice slowness if one or two were streaming music while the others were doing graphics heavy internet browsing. In other words, it's really not a problem. Get a home networking for Dummies book and expect to spend an hour setting up the router, 30 minutes for the first computer, and 15 minutes per additional computer. Pay special attention to the security setting recomendations, especially if you go wireless. If your desktops don't have wireless cards (and they need to be in a different room than the router), consider USB wireless devices, which should be painless to install (no cracking open the case). ETA: I've got one of these and I'm pretty happy with it: Netgear 802.11g wireless router |
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