Cs610 GDB
Tuesday, July 05, 2011 Posted In CS and IT Edit ThisSolution:
For home internet, WiFi is best. Other wireless connections are 3G and 4G, but they are often costly and don't really compare to WiFi. Depending on the size of your house, there are different levels of WiFi you might need. 2000sq. ft. or less can use a wireless-G router, while larger homes need a Wireless-N router. If you have built-in wireless, it will work but make sure any external WiFi USB sticks or PCI cards match with your Wireless-G, or N connection.
YOU CAN MAKE 2 POSSIBLE OUTCOMES FROM THE ABOVE PHRASE,
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Theoretically there is a very good possibility. The fault with wireless signals is that it gets attenuated with distance. Double the distance and the signal strength becomes one fourth. Inverse square law.
That great scientist and engineer and inventor Nikolai Tesla had done much work with longitudinal electromagnetic waves and one advantage is that it does not lose its strength by traveling distances.
But this technology is not yet implemented because only Tesla knew how to do it.
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There is wimax it's new and few people know of it but it has a longer range so you could pretty much be somewhere else like down the street and still get full signal strength and it is 4g speed clear is the company that provides it you should look it up.
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Yes. Wifi = wireless. 3G/4G aren't anywhere near as good as wireless. It also depends on your router. I'd get a good B/G/N router. (I have a Netgear WNDR3700 and it goes up to 350 Mbps.)
Only other wireless Internet connection I know is 3G/4G, and compared to an average home Internet connection they aren't too reliable or fast. So yeah, use WiFi