The latest audiophile streamer craze


erik_squires

Showing 4 responses by erik_squires

FTR, reflecting Wifi is real, but funny looking. Maybe for the sake of being socially acceptable use a mesh router or wired Ethernet. :)

@drmuso I believe you. :)

 

I only meant that with mesh networks the overall need for aluminum foil tweaks goes down.

I think the article is correct for the physics. I just think most consumers would opt for moving the router or using a mesh network to extend it first.

There is of course the benefit that shaping your wifi footprint away from neighbors and the street can make it harder for crackers to drive by and hack into your network.

@jon_5912 Cantenna is a little different. It’s about long range from point to point, like if you needed to get Wifi in a remote location and had line off-site. As I recall, you need 2, one on each end, the idea being that the far side would have a router/switch there that would extend your LAN.

The article I linked to is more about signal shaping. Like your router is on the west side of your house and you lacked signal on the east.

But seriously though the author fails to point out that the culprit is often not signal strength but congestion, and in the modern world of mesh routers I wonder if anyone really cares.

Of course, audioiphiles being audiophiles we don't care what it looks like so long as it's more revealing. :D

 

But seriously folks, remember that Wi-Fi analyzers for your PC and phone are free and can help you not only understand your signal strength but pick unused router channels.  If you live in a Wifi congested area moving to a less used channel can really boost your signal reliability.