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Topic: Wireless internet and home networking question. (Read 3109 times)
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SurfD
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4039
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I live in a large house with a bunch of college folk, and I am the guy who "supplies" the internet for most of the residents who want it. Part of my problem is that I live in the basement, and a number of people live on the second floor, and running wires from my router to their rooms is damn near impossible. Recently a new guy moved in who brought his own wireless router with him, so I got to thinking:
Would it be possible to set up his wireless router to pull a signal off of my wireless router, such that he could act as the hub for the people on the second floor, without me needing to run a wire up there?
IE:
Cable Modem --> My router (Wireless connection)--> His Router (Wired Connection)--> His computer, other computers up stairs
Is this possible? Or is that kind of thing done with different hardware?
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Darwinism is the Gateway Science.
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Engels
Terracotta Army
Posts: 9029
inflicts shingles.
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Its perfectly possible.
His computer's gateway = his router
his router's gateway = your router
your router's gateway = your cable modem
There's also such a thing as a signal booster too.
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I should get back to nature, too. You know, like going to a shop for groceries instead of the computer. Maybe a condo in the woods that doesn't even have a health club or restaurant attached. Buy a car with only two cup holders or something. -Signe
I LIKE being bounced around by Tonkors. - Lantyssa
Babies shooting themselves in the head is the state bird of West Virginia. - schild
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Viin
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6159
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I don't care much for router to router setups, why can't he just use your wireless connection? He shouldn't need to feed the second floor himself.
If you get a "good" wireless router, it should be fine in a multistory house as long as it's not concrete walls or anything. Align the antenna horizontally so it gets the best coverage up and down. (So get a router that has an adjust able antenna).
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- Viin
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Trippy
Administrator
Posts: 23657
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If both routers can talk to each other in "wireless repeater" mode it should be doable, otherwise it gets more complicated since the traditional way of adding an additional access point to a network requires cabling the access point using Ethernet. There are also "range expanders" (essentially a wireless repeater) such as this one that will do what you want -- extend the range of your router without requiring any additional network cabling.
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Righ
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6542
Teaching the world Google-fu one broken dream at a time.
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The camera adds a thousand barrels. - Steven Colbert
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SurfD
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4039
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Well, the main reason he cant use my Wireless Router directly, is because he doesent have a Wireless Network Card in his PC. His setup (before he moved here) was exactly the same as mine: Cable modem -> Router -> PC, all wired. Only reason I have a wireless router is because my sister has a Laptop, which she brings over occasionally and connects wirelessly.
If i could connect wired conveniently from my router to his, i would love to, but this house is not exactly modern, and was not wired for any kind of internal network. Fishing cables through the walls / wherever is a bit beyond anything i am willing to go through to get a wire up to the second floor.
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Darwinism is the Gateway Science.
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Ironwood
Terracotta Army
Posts: 28240
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"Mr Soft Owl has Seen Some Shit." - Sun Tzu
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Sky
Terracotta Army
Posts: 32117
I love my TV an' hug my TV an' call it 'George'.
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It's simple with Airport. You can chain routers or even grab the little plug dealie (Airport Express, iirc) that just plugs into the wall and acts as a wireless repeater.
I think you need a mac to admin it, but you should have one anyway :P Works fine with any hardware, of course.
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Morfiend
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6009
wants a greif tittle
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Ironwood
Terracotta Army
Posts: 28240
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I bought one for the bosses house. It's Rubbish, it has bad range, doesn't support many other devices that aren't linksys, it can't handle security, so you have to run an open wep, it's basically complete, complete, complete shite.
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"Mr Soft Owl has Seen Some Shit." - Sun Tzu
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Righ
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6542
Teaching the world Google-fu one broken dream at a time.
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Just use a Linksys WRT54G - they do WDS natively now. But if you use the Sveasoft firmware you can also turn up the strength of the radio transmitter too.
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The camera adds a thousand barrels. - Steven Colbert
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Viin
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6159
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I just bought a Netgear Wireless Router, because it was $35 at BestBuy and my wife needed to get online with her wireless capable laptop. Seems fine with my wired connection, but her laptop has issues. Every 3 mins or so it'd lose the DHCP issued IP and, even though it never says it's disconnected from the wireless network, it get's an "automatic private ip" and loses all the gateway/dns settings. Rebooting the laptop gets it back online, but then it promptly loses it again. It's never been used on a wireless network before, so I don't know if it's the router or the laptop (leaning towards laptop); I'll have to do some troubleshooting and see what happens. I'll bring my iBook home and see if I can get online with that without any problems. So anyways, it seems to work fine and it supports WPA-PSK which seems to work OK. And it's cheap.
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- Viin
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SurfD
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4039
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Just use a Linksys WRT54G - they do WDS natively now. But if you use the Sveasoft firmware you can also turn up the strength of the radio transmitter too.
Coincidently enough, I have a WRT54g (ver 2). The new roomie has something by some company i have never heard of. Do you think they will play well together, or am i going to have problems? Also, where can I grab this Sveasoft Firmware you speak of, and is it easy to recover if i screw up the installation?
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Darwinism is the Gateway Science.
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Righ
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6542
Teaching the world Google-fu one broken dream at a time.
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The camera adds a thousand barrels. - Steven Colbert
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