• HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
    ·
    11 months ago

    Lies!

    I see wi-fi antennae. What gamer settles for that?

    I want to go to an estate agent and say "I want a house so wired that if I down 82 redbulls and punch through the drywall after losing a round of Call of Skyrim, anywhere in the house, I should be able to reach in the hole and pull out a bale of Cat 6."

    • LufyCZ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
      ·
      11 months ago

      Looks like a router to me, in which case it's probably for his phone and tv.

      The pc is close enough to it to be hardwired

    • Lemmington Bunnie@aussie.zone
      cake
      ·
      11 months ago

      We're living with my grandmother temporarily, and we don't want the risk of trip hazard so had to get a good WiFi router.

      It goes down whenever she uses the microwave - awesome for me, as I work from home.

      Also we're tied to using her ISPs router because we didn't want to risk losing her phone number and other dramas moving to ours, so the modem router we use is theirs, and it sucks and the first two have blown up in the space of a year - we're on our third.

      Meanwhile our great equipment is sitting in plastic crates in the garage.

      Oh well. Do it for her!

      • railsdev@programming.dev
        ·
        11 months ago

        Yikes, if it’s going down when the microwave is being used it sounds like it only supports the 2 GHz channels.

        • Lemmington Bunnie@aussie.zone
          cake
          ·
          edit-2
          11 months ago

          It's on some dual band thing which can be split - I think we forgot to set it up on the last two, only bothered on the first. I can't remember if the first went down when the microwave was used.

          • railsdev@programming.dev
            ·
            11 months ago

            Personally I prefer to keep both bands on the same SSID/encryption scheme so devices automagically choose the best band depending on coverage. But it’s just my random opinion, lol.

      • lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee
        ·
        11 months ago

        But why would you lose her phone number using another router? I use the cable company's shitty modem but I have a super nice router, no issues. If her landline phone is actually VoIP then it seems like it should still function with another router? Maybe I'm wrong on that. If it's a true landline then one should have nothing to do with the other though. Oh and one more point if the car comp6just nukes her phone number and hands it to someone else because you hooked up a 3rd party router then seriously eff them.

        • Lemmington Bunnie@aussie.zone
          cake
          ·
          11 months ago

          In Australia, the phone number is tied to the ISP, and she's with the biggest, worst one. We considered porting but the risk would be too great and she was too anxious about it.