Wireless networking

RawHotSauce

Member
Jun 13, 2000
62
0
0
My problem is my sister has a cable modem set up in her apt and its on her comp. There are two other computers that need to get hooked up and I can't use the standard Cat-5 setup because no drilling is allowed or anything like that. All of the computers currently have NIC's although I don't the brands or speeds. Do any of you know a good brand to get or a relatively cheap wireless kit? I have heard you can do it through the electrical outlets also but I don't know how well this would work in an apt. Thanks any help would be appreciated. Oh and if you have any links to reviews that would also be nice.
 

psyched

Member
Mar 4, 2001
68
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0
Wireless is somewhat limited to line of sight in many cases. So if the two machines are in completely different rooms, separated by multiple walls you might be outta luck with wireless. Keep in mind there are at least two wireless technologies, both with benefits and drawbacks. Look into RF and IR. There are Home kits that use phone lines. You can pick a box that includes 2-3 NIC cards with a special hub/switch. The draw back is that you're limited to something like 1.2Mbit, which isn't too bad, but file transfers between the computers will be noticably slower. You have choices, but don't jump into the first one that falls onto your lap, do some research and compare the features and limitations.
 

jcastle

Junior Member
Mar 3, 2001
10
0
0
I've played around with the wireless setup from Linksys. Nice piece of hardware. A bit on the expensive side though. Has a max bandwidth of 11MB/sec, not too shabby and a max range of 1500 feet outside, indoors it's more like 500 feet. The connections are solid and add no noticible latency. You can go with the peer to peer setup (2 wireless cards) or get a wireless router, which would be perfect for your sister's cable modem, since it also has a built-in 4 port 10/100 switch. Drawback? Cost. $150 per card (PCMCIA) + $50 for the PCI adapter per card. If you want the wireless router, add another $400. As far as wireless goes, tough to beat this range and throughput at this price. And it actually works solid.

 

pm

Elite Member Mobile Devices
Jan 25, 2000
7,419
22
81
The really cheap solution is something like an Intel Anypoint (or whatever we are calling it) which overlays the phone system. These are cheap and should solve the problem with about 10Mb of bandwidth and virtually no latency hit.

The moderately cheap solution is a 1.6Mb wireless system like the Acer Aviator, Warplink or the Intel solutions. Bear in mind that you will see a fairly substantial bandwidth hit if they aren't right next to each other. I don't recommend this since I've heard a lot of people complain that the bandwidth is simply awful if there is more than one wall in the way.

The expensive but preferred wireless solution is 11Mb/s and uses the 802.11b standard. The SMC EZ Connect 11Mb Access Point ($250) and PCI cards ($170) are a pretty good solution. Or the D-Link or Linksys solutions... they are all based on the same technology so they are approx. the same. See this page at MWave.Com for examples.

I picked up an IBM 802.11b 11Mb Wireless Access Point on E*bay for $220 last week and got it working last night. The cards I'm using are Lucent/Avaya Silver (64-bit encryption) PC Cards and I bought them for $130 ea. (yeah, I got a good deal - this setup should have run somewhere around $1400 retail).

My first impressions are pretty similar to jcastle. Real-life bandwidth is substantially less than the advertised amount when you throw a couple of walls in the way, so get something much faster than you think you will need (for my cable modem I wanted at least 2Mb out, so a 1.6Mb card would have been far too slow). Latency seems neglible. I walked down the street carrying my laptop (yeah I looked a little silly, but it was night...) and figure that the range with two walls in the way was about 400-500ft. I wasn't tracking the bandwidth as I pushed the range, but I'll give this a try when I get the chance.

Personally I'd recommend one of the phoneline solutions. It will get you the most bandwidth for the least buck. The wireless solutions are only really cool if you have a laptop.
 

pm

Elite Member Mobile Devices
Jan 25, 2000
7,419
22
81
True. Didn't see the dates.

So what did you end up doing, R.H.S.?
 
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