How To Boost Wi-Fi Signal

take8easy

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2014
4,781
1,263
113
Slowly technology is leaving me behind, no matter how much I try to stay abreast.

We have Shaw at home and I am paying extra to have their highest possible speed internet. It even has two wifi thingies. It is pretty fast, as long as you are not too far from the modem. Still the farthest bedroom doesn't get a good wi fi signal. It drops right when the guy is about to cum in girl's mouth... if you know wht I mean. Sometimes, I have to switch to cellular data and the thought of charges on my phone bills softens my erection. Clearly I can't masturbate in the living room!

My question is simple. How to boost the signal so I can cum right as the thick stream of lands on girls lips.

Oh speaking of technology, has anyone ever had an All In One desktop? I kinda like the idea of a tidier look without a jungle of wires on the table. I was advised against it though. Any intel? Thanks.

Yours Truly

T8E
 

nightswhisper

Member
Feb 20, 2016
785
9
18
You need something called a Wifi Range Extender (aka Repeater)

They sell for 25 - 50 oon Amazon or in electronics stores. They're usually quite easy to set up - Plug in, connect to the wifi extender itself wirelessly, open a webpage on a phone or computer, type in an address, connect to existing network, and now your network has extended by another 100 - 250 feet.

I have a few of these in my house and they work well:

https://www.amazon.ca/NETGEAR-N300-...&qid=1543442018&sr=8-3&keywords=Wifi+Repeater

You can set up a mesh network at home as well. But this is a massive change to your network and takes some more time and money.
 

clu

Active member
Oct 3, 2010
1,268
14
38
Vancouver
The obvious question is whether the modem is near the middle of your house? Not much point having it against an exterior wall where half the signal goes to your backyard. Likewise in a 3-floor house (if you are so lucky) the best position is the middle floor.

There's also some geometry to getting the most range out of a single transmitter. Imagine drawing a straight line from you to the modem. The part of the line that is inside walls, pipes, etc. drops the signal more rapidly than the part that's in the air. So the more oblique the line is vs. the walls, the worse its range.

And yeah all-in-one desktops are a bad deal because, like laptops, you can't upgrade or replace each piece easily.
 

WandErection

Cunning Linguist
Jul 11, 2006
1,320
976
113
Lower Mainland, BC
IMO, range extenders are a waste of money. What works better these days is something called Mesh Networks, and there are dozens of options available. There's Eero, Orbi, Google, among others. The difference is these devices coordinate roaming and signal strength between themselves and the devices connected to them. Conversely, repeaters are more simplistic and just give the signal a blind boost.

I'd recommend disabling the wifi on the modem provided by the company and just add your own system. Look at youtube for some reviews of mesh wifi options.
 

take8easy

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2014
4,781
1,263
113
Can I not just text someone of LL, give 250/hr and have my needs taken care of? Mess , extenders, networks... gosh I am dizzy already.

But on a lighter note, thank you guys. I am trying to contact Flaw oops, I meant Shaw and I am so happy they are honest about the wait time 40 to 50 minutes. Also, they have this great feature which told me I am 192nd in the queue. Yay!!!!
 

WandErection

Cunning Linguist
Jul 11, 2006
1,320
976
113
Lower Mainland, BC
Can I not just text someone of LL, give 250/hr and have my needs taken care of? Mess , extenders, networks... gosh I am dizzy already.

But on a lighter note, thank you guys. I am trying to contact Flaw oops, I meant Shaw and I am so happy they are honest about the wait time 40 to 50 minutes. Also, they have this great feature which told me I am 192nd in the queue. Yay!!!!
If everything were only that easy ��*♂
 

westwoody

Well-known member
Jun 10, 2004
7,663
7,214
113
Westwood
There's also some geometry to getting the most range out of a single transmitter
^ I moved my modem from the exterior wall of a bedroom to the kitchen, centre of the house. Vast improvement!
Try it and it might save the bother of getting a booster or new network.
 

take8easy

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2014
4,781
1,263
113
^ I moved my modem from the exterior wall of a bedroom to the kitchen, centre of the house. Vast improvement!
Try it and it might save the bother of getting a booster or new network.
I never thought of that!! My modem sits right next to the exterior wall simply because that's where the cable connects from the outside!!!

But now the question arises how the heck do I get the cable to extend from underneath the sofa, over the carpet, across a hallway go up the kitchen counter and then find a place behind the pickle jars!!

You know what, I am just going to go to Leolist and see who is available on short notice.

T8E
 

Robert Upndown

You can call me Bob
Sep 23, 2011
1,006
374
83
 

wetnose

Well-known member
Mar 23, 2003
2,077
481
83
South Vancouver
I never thought of that!! My modem sits right next to the exterior wall simply because that's where the cable connects from the outside!!!

But now the question arises how the heck do I get the cable to extend from underneath the sofa, over the carpet, across a hallway go up the kitchen counter and then find a place behind the pickle jars!!

You know what, I am just going to go to Leolist and see who is available on short notice.

T8E
You don't have to extend a cable. Assuming your house uses modern 3 pin plug, use something called a Powerline adapter kit. (Memoryexpress.com: Powerline AV500)

You get 2 little plastic boxes.

1) Conect an ethernet cord from your router (not your modem) into 1 of these guys.

2) Plug it into the wall power outlet. It has to be a wall outlet, can't be a surge protector.

3) Look for the wall power outlet closest to where you want the other one to be. Plug the other one in, and connect it to your laptop with another ethernet cord. (you could get the wifi version but it's more $$$)

Yes, this neat little gizmo uses your home's electrical wiring to form an ethernet connection. And yes, it's reliable and stronger than wifi. Look up powerline ethernet on youtube for further details.
 
Last edited:

80watts

Well-known member
May 20, 2004
3,340
1,264
113
Victoria
Exterior wall, make sure they are not stucco- have metal wire (chicken wire) could interfere with wifi signal

Also when getting an apartment/home check for cable connections, like above the central location is best. Some contractors spend the extra 500 dollars and put cat 5/cat 6 to all rooms from central location.

If you ever do renos, spend the extra money; to wire all exposed walls for cable or cat.
 

nightswhisper

Member
Feb 20, 2016
785
9
18
Exterior wall, make sure they are not stucco- have metal wire (chicken wire) could interfere with wifi signal

Also when getting an apartment/home check for cable connections, like above the central location is best. Some contractors spend the extra 500 dollars and put cat 5/cat 6 to all rooms from central location.

If you ever do renos, spend the extra money; to wire all exposed walls for cable or cat.
You sound like a CISCO tech.
 

badbadboy

Well-known member
Nov 2, 2006
9,544
306
83
In Lust Mostly
T8E

Is your Shaw box also your wifi router?

If it is, they are renowned for not being very good for coverage.

Lots of people will use their own wifi router and Shaw puts their modem into bridge mode. From there you can add range extenders.

If you are using an Apple product, you can set it up via Airport Utility.
 

take8easy

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2014
4,781
1,263
113
Shaw sucks! True story.
I have used Telus and trust me, I got tired of sticking pin into modem's butt hole every other day to reset it. There were billing issues as well so I have been with Shaw ever since. Honestly the only complaint I have is that the signal drops off in the bedroom that is farthest from the modem/router thing. I will try to see if I can somehow figure out a way to put it on a central location.
 

justwannahavefun

Active member
Mar 17, 2018
224
172
43
I have been in the same boat with range issues, including moving the router to a more central location. That improved it somewhat, but still had issues in certain areas. I went to the google mesh setup and it is awesome. Expensive, yes, but now have great coverage throughout the house. I bought the three pack, and was able to put one in the detached garage and now even have perfect wifi out there. Highly recommended.
 

EuroSZabina

Well-known member
May 6, 2008
864
416
63
Vancouver/Coquitlam
Slowly technology is leaving me behind, no matter how much I try to stay abreast.

We have Shaw at home and I am paying extra to have their highest possible speed internet. It even has two wifi thingies. It is pretty fast, as long as you are not too far from the modem. Still the farthest bedroom doesn't get a good wi fi signal. It drops right when the guy is about to cum in girl's mouth... if you know wht I mean. Sometimes, I have to switch to cellular data and the thought of charges on my phone bills softens my erection. Clearly I can't masturbate in the living room!

My question is simple. How to boost the signal so I can cum right as the thick stream of lands on girls lips.

Oh speaking of technology, has anyone ever had an All In One desktop? I kinda like the idea of a tidier look without a jungle of wires on the table. I was advised against it though. Any intel? Thanks.

Yours Truly

T8E
Sound like you have the same issue like me. I'm also with Shaw, I had to call them last week because I couldn't take it anymore.
They came out and they told me that my modem was in the wrong place and my kitchen was blocking the signals in my rooms and in basement.
They put my modem in the living room which is the center of my house
Now it's much better.
 

take8easy

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2014
4,781
1,263
113
Sound like you have the same issue like me. I'm also with Shaw, I had to call them last week because I couldn't take it anymore.
They came out and they told me that my modem was in the wrong place and my kitchen was blocking the signals in my rooms and in basement.
They put my modem in the living room which is the center of my house
Now it's much better.
Yea, it makes sense. My modem is right next to an external wall where the connection comes in and which also means it is tucked away in one corner of the house. I am trying to get in touch with them to figure it out because I hate when the video freezes just as the girl goes down on her knees with her mouth agape. :)
 

clu

Active member
Oct 3, 2010
1,268
14
38
Vancouver
Yea, it makes sense. My modem is right next to an external wall where the connection comes in and which also means it is tucked away in one corner of the house. I am trying to get in touch with them to figure it out because I hate when the video freezes just as the girl goes down on her knees with her mouth agape. :)
Cable modems can be plugged into any working cable jack in your house. (Though Shaw can sometimes disconnect jacks that aren't in use, but that's easy for them to fix.)
 

rxwca

Member
For all-in-ones, my current pc is that and so was my previous one. I got the first one because of the touch screen. Good for carpal tunnel syndrome.
There're pros and cons. If you like to upgrade hardware, AIO is not for you. I get a good one to start with and don't find the need to upgrade anymore. My network port did die in one HP (hewlett packard) over time. And I've wifi issue in the other HP. But I just use the cable connection.
Despite these, it is convenient being mostly just one piece. It's a matter of preference.
 
Last edited:
Ashley Madison
Vancouver Escorts