ericm979
Super Member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2016
- Messages
- 5,802
- Location
- Santa Cruz Mountains CA, Southern OR
- Tractor
- Branson 3725H Deere 5105
Your neighbor is very trusting to give you his wifi password. So much can go wrong with that for both of you. For example the neighbor's kid searches for jihadi material or kiddie **** and now everyone whose devices have used that wifi are suspect.
What you need is internet service to your house. It's separate from cell phone service(*). Depending on what's available in your location you can go with DSL, Comcast, some form of radio, or satellite. Internet is a requirement for both me and my wife to work from home. Being in a remote area it's been a challenge at times. 21 years ago it was not easily available in our area and I had to purchase a commercial connection and gear. The phone company had five trucks on our road for a week to drag special wires a couple miles up the road. Currently we're using a radio based deal that hits a repeater antenna on the next ridge which sends it up a canyon to another antenna.
Once you have internet service you can use whatever router you want to get Wifi to your end devices. Some wifi routers have multiple transmitters that communicate between themselves on a different frequency. So if you have a big house or want to cover the barn or back yard you can add a transmitter near by. We're using Netgear Orbi units and they work well.
(*) there are also cellular data plans and most cell phones can be turned into wifi hotspots for your laptop to connect to. You say you have poor coverage but that often differs between carriers. I find that Verizon has the widest network but in an specific spot it could be any of the carriers that covers you best.
What you need is internet service to your house. It's separate from cell phone service(*). Depending on what's available in your location you can go with DSL, Comcast, some form of radio, or satellite. Internet is a requirement for both me and my wife to work from home. Being in a remote area it's been a challenge at times. 21 years ago it was not easily available in our area and I had to purchase a commercial connection and gear. The phone company had five trucks on our road for a week to drag special wires a couple miles up the road. Currently we're using a radio based deal that hits a repeater antenna on the next ridge which sends it up a canyon to another antenna.
Once you have internet service you can use whatever router you want to get Wifi to your end devices. Some wifi routers have multiple transmitters that communicate between themselves on a different frequency. So if you have a big house or want to cover the barn or back yard you can add a transmitter near by. We're using Netgear Orbi units and they work well.
(*) there are also cellular data plans and most cell phones can be turned into wifi hotspots for your laptop to connect to. You say you have poor coverage but that often differs between carriers. I find that Verizon has the widest network but in an specific spot it could be any of the carriers that covers you best.