Monday, June 18, 2007

Setting up home wireless network is easy and inexpensive

The lazy days of summer are here. It is a time when many of us move outside for the next three months. Grilling on our decks or sitting out and enjoying the evening breezes. Just as you have been able to take your telephone conversations with you to the back yard or deck using a cordless phone, you can also take your laptop as well. Setting up a home wireless computer network is really quite easy and inexpensive. Even if you don’t venture outside, having access to the internet in any room of the house and having multiple family members share the single connection is a real plus.

A home wireless network consists of a small device that connects directly to your cable or DSL modem. It is called a Wireless Network Router. Instead of maintaining the connection to all the computers in the house over wires, it actually “broadcasts” to these computers within about 100 feet of the device using high frequency radio waves. Each computer must be equipped with a wireless network card. So for most of us mortals who live in standard size houses, the 100 ft. radius encompasses all the rooms in the house and the back yard.

Each computer using this wireless network signal must have the appropriate add-on hardware. Often laptops come with a built in card. There are also adapters that plug into the USB port of your desktop computer.

You can set up a home network that includes the wireless router and three cards or add-on devices for three computers for a total of about $125.00. All computer stores and the major appliance retailers have the equipment for sale. Two of the most popular brands are Lynksys and D-Link.

The cost of the equipment is a function of the speed that it can send and receive data and the distance it can broadcast. For most homes look for a label on the device that reads “802.11g.” This should work fine, unless you are a power user sending high definition video around your home on this network.

Be sure that you follow the directions to “secure” your network. A person driving down your street with the proper equipment could eavesdrop on your connection and capture data that might have your banking or other private information. If you live in the city where apartments or homes are close together, a non secure network could provide free internet access to several of your neighbors. The only way you would know is that your connection might get very slow.

Oh yes, both Cincinnati Bell ZoomTown™ and Time Warner Road Runner™ will provide and set up a wireless network for you for an extra monthly fee. When I last looked, the cost of doing it yourself would be recouped in about 24 months.

So break out the brews, the hotdogs and the laptop and go wireless this summer.

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