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PeerWebmaster
![]() Posts: 2,418
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: localhost
Age: 21
Reputation Power: 207
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June 19th, 2004, 10:28 AM
If it's two seperate cable lines coming to your house, it'll be down to the policy of your cable supplier - many don't allow two internet lines unless you have a business account.
Don't forget that you'd have to have two seperate connections - so you couldn't 'share' your (for example) 1Mbps between the two - you'd have to have two internet subscriptions, although I guess it would be fine to have it on one bill. Have you considered getting a wireless network bridge? |
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Smarter than the average
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Location: Earth
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June 19th, 2004, 10:33 AM
Quote:
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Zeropaid Regular
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June 19th, 2004, 10:44 AM
well my other option is to string the cat5 cable out the window, bury it and stick it into the basement window (my room is down in the basement) and put it in my room. It'd have to be a long cable, though. Looks like I'm gonna have to email adelphia and ask them.
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ZP Trancecore Cussin
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Location: Prince Albert, Sask.
Age: 26
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June 19th, 2004, 11:27 AM
CAT 5 cable (Im assuming youre using) can go for 100 meters before the signal deteriorates. You could just wire it through your house to your computer and connect it to the router (Unless you have a mansion, a 100 meters should be enough :)) It would be the cheapest way, but would take work.
Or you could just go wireless with everything. That will set you back a 100+ dollars. |
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Black Mage Power.
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Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: WA, USA
Age: 24
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June 19th, 2004, 01:19 PM
If the wireless router won't reach both computers in it's current position, move it. Put the router in the exact middle, or as close to the middle as the nearest cable plug. Other option is to get a different router that has longer distance, I'm not sure what to reccomend here.
How's about them apples?
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Coral Springs, Florida, US
Age: 24
Reputation Power: 117
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June 19th, 2004, 02:54 PM
"Does anyone here know if you can use two modems in the same house?"
Cable modems run off of your cable tv line, which is seperate from your telephone line. Regular modems run off your telephone line. You could not network a modem to call your own house to connect it to the network. There is a networking option that may be available to you. There is a device that you can network your home using the electrical outlets of your home, and they plug right into the network card of your computer, and your power outlet. http://www.newegg.com/app/viewProduc...190-002&depa=0 Its called a power line ethernet bridge, one RJ45 (ethernet cable per plug). Pretty nifty stuff. Only drawback I see is they would have to be on the same circuit in your house and you probably have more than one...I would flip the circuit breakers in your house to see which ones you can connect where to get an idea of maximum distance you can plug these bad boys into. Well, hope you get situated. |
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I'll Not Poison You Too.
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: USA (East)
Age: 31
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June 19th, 2004, 03:03 PM
Make sure you read up on possible noise interference if you decide to do something like that. Maybe google it with reliability. I am not quite sure what frequency range Ethernet works on, but if it is far enough away from 60Hz I don't know if noise would still be too much of a problem.
http://www.nwfusion.com/news/tech/2001/1008tech.html lived to please, always a beautiful smile look into my eyes, imagine peace, happy warm touch, we are drowning together |
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