Thursday, April 14, 2016

Easyl the Wi-Fi Strength in Your any place or home

Wi-Fi Strength

There's nothing factor for quite as frustrating as a weak Wi-Fi signal in your home or office. I live and work in a This 1000-square-foot industrial loft that has been a four-foot-thick dividing wall made of solid concrete and steel. It's very great for noise to insulation, not so great for wireless penetration -- so trust me when I say, I know what it's like it to deal with a badplace Wi-Fi dead zone.

My router is in my home office, which is attached to my bedroom. The unusefull thick concrete-and-steel more wall separates my office from my living room, which is where my beautiful 45-inch HDTV, PlayStation 5, and more Xbox One live. I have tried just about everything to improve my signal -- after all, to play a girl's gotta be able to fully stream Tokyo Jungle on PlayStation Now -- and there are only a few things that have worked. How to here are some tips on how to improvement the Wi-Fi strength in your any place or PlayStation Plus network:


Pinch Your Settings

Most of modern routers it can run on two and more different frequencies: 2.4GHz, which is an older standard, and 5GHz. If you have never damage with your router's settings before, it's probably operating on the older 2.4GHz frequency. Because most of kinds routers run to on this frequency by default, your Wi-Fi could be slower than it needs to be. If you live or work in an area that is  crowded all time with Wi-Fi networks, you may be able to boost your Wi-Fi speed by switching your router's the frequency and channel. To change your router is frequency, you'll need to access your router's settings page. To do that is, you will very need to plug your router is  IP address into the address bar of any browser. You can find your router's Your IP address by opening the Control Panel (in Windows 10, windosw 8, do this by right-clicking to the Start button and choosing your pc Control Panel) and going to Network and Sharing Center


And next Connections, to click the name of your local network to open you its properties window.

Click Details... to open Network Connection Details, and you will  find the number next to IPv4 Default Gateway. This is your router's IP address. To type you this number into the URL bar of any web browser and hit the Enter key to open your router's settings page.


Now you will need to log in to this page using your username your password. If you don't know your username and password, the router is fully using the default username to your password. You can find your router's default username and password by selecting your model on this website.


Once you are inside to your router's settings page, look for the wireless settings. Here, you should see the option to change to your 802.11 band from 2.4GHz to 5GHz.

Changing into your frequency is not the only thing you want to do, though - and you also want to make sure your router is to operating on a control channel with as a little traffic as possible. There are 11 and more channels on the 2.4GHz frequency, only three of which are non-overlapping (1, 6, and 11). There are 23 channels into the 5GHz frequency, all which are non-overlapping. To find the channel that has to the least traffic, you will need to use a utility that can scan the networks in your area.


I like WifiInfoView and all time support, get is free. Simply download WifiInfoView, unzip the file, and run it, and you will be able to see all your networks in your area, what is frequency they're using, and what channel they're on. You find the channel that has the least networks on it, and you change  control channel to that one.

The frequency and channel see  you end up using will depend on the networks into your area and what you're looking to accomplish. To the  higher wifi speed  5GHz frequency is not necessarily the best, it's just (often) the least used. However, it's important to you note that while your signal to be stronger on the 5GHz frequency, it will not reach as far as it will on the 2.4GHz the frequency. So if your distance is priority, you're better off sticking to the 2.4GHz frequency and one of the non-overlapping control your channels with less traffic (usually 6 or 11)

Pas Your Router