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Tell me about powerline networking
So, I have been fucking around with wireless in this house for a considerable amount of time and I'm tired of it; I think I'ma take the plunge on this powerline thing, but I don't really know anything about it. There seems to be a variety of hardware that varies in price and some concern over the wiring in different houses (some of the wiring in the house is fairly old.)
Is there anything I should look out for, or should I pretty much just buy the cheapest couple of adapters and see how they work?
hope? change? busproject.org
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I'd buy the good stuff from a place with a decent return policy and try it out. A 2-room starter kit should be less than $100, and the addons for each room after that are $40-$50 each. Cheaper than hiring someone to run Cat5e
Wireless was such less of a pain in the butt to deal with. If you're considering powerline ethernet, and you own the house, you'd be better off cutting hole in the drywall and putting in a plate and running ethernet through the wall.
Xbox Gamertag: GAMB1NO325Xi
Unless you've got a very old home with un-insullated, plaster walls, it's not that easy to run cable between floors. You're looking at several holes in the walls, drilling through studs, floor plates, etc. It's really not all that easy or cheap.
$100 for an ethernet-over-power kit is far, far easier and far, far more convenient.
When we bought our current home, I considered running cable. I had my Xbox in the living room on the main floor and my computer/router/modem on the top floor in the office. I thought it would be easy to just run cable down, instead of buying a wireless adapter for my Xbox. Then, I thought about it. The Xbox wasn't staying in that spot forever. And if/when we had kids, neither would the office. What would I do then? Run cable to the fully finished basement? Into another bedroom? More holes. More drilling. More re-drywalling. More money and time.
Instead, I spent $100 on the D-Link kit and maybe 10 minutes "setting it up." Really, there is no set-up involved. You plug one unit directly into an outlet beside your router and run a cable from that to your router. You plug the second unit directly into an outlet beside your computer/xbox/whatever-you-want-Internet-to and run a similar cable. Done. That's it, usually.
And if you ever need to re-arrange things? Easily done.
I guess that's true, if you're only dealing with interior walls. Even still, you've got to drill through the floor plate as well.
I think our landlord might be cool with me running wire, but I don't really want to do that since I'd have to go through not only walls but ceilings. I also don't have any idea of how the wiring is actually laid out and I don't really want to be responsible if I fuck up somewhere.
I should know the answer to this but I'ma ask anyway in case it's not obvious: as long as all the outlets I'm using run through the same breaker it should be fine, right?
my unofficial autobio will be accompanied with tips on how to smile
cause I've found that when they don't see you frown, they never know that you're a threat
and they don't sweat you when you came around
"If you don't know who Kendra is, I'm officially not speaking to you."
They don't even necessarily have to be on the same breaker. The outlets I'm using aren't.
They don't have to be, but you may get funky/unpredictable performance if they aren't.