Hi. I bought a wireless G router for my house and placed it on the second floor. What I noticed is that weak or sometimes there is no signal if naa ko sa ground floor.
Hope this helps.![]()
Hi. I bought a wireless G router for my house and placed it on the second floor. What I noticed is that weak or sometimes there is no signal if naa ko sa ground floor.
Hope this helps.![]()
practical question lang ha..unsa may gamit sa wireless N kung ang distance sa access point is not more then 20meters...kaya ra man kaayu na sa wireless G...kay ang TS nagmention man ug practicality...what if you give him your scenario like what i posted on post no.8....to convince the TS on buying N products.
its can be used also if naay lappy nga wireless n ang capability... mas makabenefit to cya compare sa g...practical question lang ha..unsa may gamit sa wireless N kung ang distance sa access point is not more then 20meters...kaya ra man kaayu na sa wireless G...kay ang TS nagmention man ug practicality...what if you give him your scenario like what i posted on post no.8....to convince the TS on buying N products.
bcin daghan og bongbong iyong balay sir? mo interfer man pod ang signal ana...Hi. I bought a wireless G router for my house and placed it on the second floor. What I noticed is that weak or sometimes there is no signal if naa ko sa ground floor.
Hope this helps.![]()
read this. hope it helps.. thanks mr. google.ang G diay...sampak man ang signal dire sa mga N-lappy sa akong mga sisters and brothers...
Need to buy a new Router - Wireless N or G?: MyOpenRouter
also this one.
Wireless G Vs Wireless N - The Difference Between G and N Wireless Protocol
thanks again mr. google.
what your claiming is purely theoretical...you can't notice the difference if you're just a few meters away...unless you are provided with a 50mbps bandwidth from your ISP..but here in the Philippines,its impossible...our connection here is only 700kbps - 1mbps,it sucks.so why pay more when you can have it for less...
As far as the wireless band goes, 802.11n devices can operate on 2.4 or 5GHz bands. However, to use 5GHz all connected devices must be 802.11n compliant. Note, too, the 5GHz band will significantly decrease the maximum range. The tradeoff is that there will be much less interference, and 5GHz is drastically more effective at penetrating concrete and brick walls.
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