I thought it came in packets delivered by tiny mailmen
Waves...but not the negative ones, man.
Considering how much time I spend on my computer, I would suggest continuous stream. ;-)
It will come to you as a narrow path always and increasingly
blocked and obstructed by bloggers who will try to lure you
to click upon their garbage and infect you with blog trash
and Ebola.
Shun them.
Shun the blogs and live.
Lucy in the sky with diamonds?
Electrons....beelions and beelions of ‘em...
If you could see the internet coming to my Verizon jet pack it would look like
Droplets, very slow droplets...
Not a happy camper.
Do you have cable or DSL?
Cable can get congested if there are many people on the same infrastructure at once. Slowdown would occur during peak surfing hours like 6pm to 11pm.
You could have alot of signal noise which could indicate bad lines, a bad tap, a bad splitter, or modem. Your cable provider, as well as you, can see this from viewing your modem. This can be diagnosed by your ISP.
If you are using WiFi, it can be all kinds of things causing this. Poor radio reception and overlapping channels are usually to blame. If you are using WiFi, connect directly to your modem and or router to troubleshoot.
I think mine comes on a slow boat from China.
It’s a series of tubes.
A honeypot?
00010101000100100101010001001111110’s
I see it coming in crests, like a breeze over powdered sugar on a huge sheet cake, maybe gingerbread. Airborne yet solid, delicious yet dangerous. White yet shadowed with dark. Peaks and valleys. Sugar like the best of powdered snow, soft and delicate yet crunchy underfoot. Pure texture.
But maybe that’s just me.
Oh yeah, forgot to mention. I’m on drugs (post surgery).
Kevin Flynn: The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they moved through the computer. What did they look like? Ships? motorcycles? Were the circuits like freeways? I kept dreaming of a world I thought I’d never see. And then, one day...
7 Year Old Sam Flynn: You got in.
Kevin Flynn: That’s right, man. I got in.
- Tron:Legacy (2010)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SxvJfOBU5tE
Huh?
Let me guess: Friday night, happy hour at the bar and all the chicks are ignoring you..........smart move carrying your laptop with you.
It’s too early on Friday night, I’ll ponder this around 12:OO
To the best of my knowledge, the different wireless communication devices (cell phone vs wi-fi for example) transmit data at different carrier frequencies and power levels. Note that the higher its carrier frequency, the more a carrier wave travels in a given direction like a light beam. The associated problem with higher carrier frequencies that they are weakened or stopped altogether by solid objects like light beams are.
Note that cell phones can adjust the power output of their transmitting carrier wave in response to receiving signals that are strong or weak.
I understand that the weakest of the data signals are bluetooth, domesticated to be used in close proximity to humans.
Antenna shapes, sticks versus dishes for example, also affect wave shape.
Corrections on any of the these points are welcome. I’ve studied basic physics but am not a technician.