Posted on 10/10/2014 4:57:37 PM PDT by lee martell
Categorize this as yet another question I have about personal computers, but am too embarrassed to ask anybody about till now. That is what I wonder. I hear the web described as a 'cloud', so I suppose it one way it exists is in the form of a massive activity ball of entertwined signals. Sometimes, I'm lucky, and my connection occurs almost immediately. Does it variate in intensity and speed as would radio waves, with consistant peaks and valleys?. I've begun to wonder if the net is being sent out in the form of linear beams, almost laser like in their straightness and concentration. Other times, my connection is sporadic, or more prone to fluctuation. It almost oozes into my cell phone. I know this sounds hopelessly unlearned, but it is a question I have. Knowing the various ways the net is sent out or received may help me to know the best way to position my phone or tablet or laptop in order to recieve these data more quickly.
Think of it more like the town water supply.
If you are the only one running a tap, you get the full flow of water. If everyone in town is filling a bath at the same time, your tap can slow to a trickle, depending how far from the pumping station you are
What a cool question:)
An interesting take on the appearance of the net is in the book “Wake” by Robert J. Sawyer.
A blind from birth teen girl receives an experimental implant that enables vision, but there is something else going on...
Long ago, my office embarked on a huge task: digitize all the maps in the nation.
After a while my boss reported that we were half finished. I knew that was far-fetched because we hadn’t even completed standards development.
He later explained that since we would eventually store binary data, all we had left was the 1’s.
LOL
The Internet comes on little cat fet.
I don't think that is true - Wireless will always be slower, cannot catch up, simply because the wire is native, while wireless necessarily is converted from wire to radio, and then back again. That necessarily takes more time than 'straight through', see?
Electricity is sold by volume. Some settling may occur during shipping.
When you put it that way, yes, it makes sense that wireless would be slower, mainly due to all the connectivity issues that must be established and maintained.
Hrumph, that doesn’t show all of the data LEAVING your computer and being input into the websites...
it sounds like a wifi issue. Lots of things can interfere with it. Where you place your devices that broadcast your wifi radio signal. Wifi is broadcast like AM radio where anything that blocks your line of site to the wifi radio causes issue.
Things that can help. Make sure your wifi router or access point is placed as high up as possible away from metal objects. Ceiling mounts, tops of book shelfs, even stacking stuff and placing it on top can help. If you are getting a full wifi signal or at least a good one and you are still slowing down, that indicates channel overlap. Wifi channels 1-4 and 5-11 overlap each other. You need a tech or to do some research to troubleshoot this. If the guy running the router is willing and able, have him change the channel to either 1 or 11 as a test.
These kinds of issues are really tough to troubleshoot remotely. You may be able to see your connection speed on your wifi enabled device by looking at the wifi connection properties. I can on android but not on windows mobile or ios without extra apps. I don’t know any since I use Inssider on a windows pro tablet. Adding an wifi extender can help but you need to check for channel overlap and bad radio placement first
I hope some of this helps. It gets complicated fast . Think of wifi like radio waves. Your actual Internet at the modem is like cars moving down a freeway. Every packet of info is a car driving along and the quality of the road can affct speed.
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