In our new build, we have a completely separate granny flat upstairs for our son.
Now the question arises whether one router downstairs is enough for our son to use Wi-Fi upstairs as well; if necessary with a repeater. Our installer says it will be difficult because so much concrete and steel is used in new houses. It would be better to have a separate router upstairs.
Other "experts" in the family say that this is all nonsense. The new good routers can handle this easily, even without a repeater. How can you tell if a router is good?
Does anyone have experience in this area?
Now the question arises whether one router downstairs is enough for our son to use Wi-Fi upstairs as well; if necessary with a repeater. Our installer says it will be difficult because so much concrete and steel is used in new houses. It would be better to have a separate router upstairs.
Other "experts" in the family say that this is all nonsense. The new good routers can handle this easily, even without a repeater. How can you tell if a router is good?
Does anyone have experience in this area?
H
hampshire23 Aug 2021 13:01All good.
In a few years, the parents of today might be watching streams on their 8K TVs, while the children immerse themselves, blind and deaf, in highly detailed 3D games through their gaming headsets. Maybe it’s good to have a technical limit then. Who knows.
In a few years, the parents of today might be watching streams on their 8K TVs, while the children immerse themselves, blind and deaf, in highly detailed 3D games through their gaming headsets. Maybe it’s good to have a technical limit then. Who knows.