Showing posts with label InternetWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label InternetWorld. Show all posts

Friday, May 20, 2016

Stop Bandwidth Stealers: 11 Tips to Boost Your Wi-Fi Signal

Wi-Fi Boost Checklist

  • Update router firmware
  • Update network adapter
  • Choose a good location for the router
  • Replace the original antenna
  • Try a high-gain antenna
  • Use a second router as an access point
  • Use a Wi-Fi booster
  • Remove signal obstructions
  • Change the Wi-Fi channel
  • Use inSIDDer
  • Stop neighbors from stealing your bandwidth

1. Boost Your Wi-Fi Signal With Updated Router Firmware

          Updating router firmware -- something many of us forget to do -- is an important first step to boosting your wireless signal. Keep your firmware up-to-date to ensure optimal device security and performance. If you're not sure how to update your router firmware, this PC Magazine offers sound advice on how to find and download updates for consumer wireless routers.

2. Update Your Network Adapter for Best Wi-Fi Performance

         It takes two to tango, so updating the firmware on your PC or laptop is another good way to improve your wireless connection. Your router could be blasting out high-quality, light-speed Wi-Fi but if your device is operating with outdated firmware, well… it's the equivalent of drinking the Atlantic Ocean through a straw.

3. Find the Best Place for Your Wi-Fi Router

         Realtors often cite "location, location, location" when extolling the virtues of a home. The same is true for Wi-Fi routers. Network performance is affected by distance, so place your router in a central location. Wi-Fi doesn't travel well through walls or floors constructed of dense material like brick or marble, so avoid putting your router in a nuclear bunker or at the bottom of a well.

4. Replace the Antenna to Boost Wi-Fi Signal

        Many auto racers replace the original engine in their car with a more powerful one in order to increase performance. Replacing your router's built in antenna with a stronger, omnidirectional antenna will help boost your Wi-Fi signal.

 DID YOU KNOW...? A common misconception is that the term Wi-Fi is short for "wireless fidelity," however this is not the case. Wi-Fi is simply a trademarked phrase that means IEEE 802.11x.

5. Consider a High-Gain Antenna

        In this instance, high-gain has nothing to do with the weight one puts on after mowing through three cheeseburgers and a jumbo pizza. High-gain antennas can be a costly solution but are a great way to boost your Wi-Fi signal if one's existing router supports the addition of an external antenna.

6. Use a Second Router as an Access Point to Boost Wi-Fi

       Just like using an extension cord to bring electricity closer to when you need it, using a second router as an access point can boost your Wi-Fi signal quite nicely. To help make configuration of this option less troublesome, try employing an access point from the same manufacturer as your router. PC Mag offers some great tips.

7. Try a Wi-Fi Booster (Extender)

         Repeaters and extenders can help broaden the range of your existing Wi-Fi. The concept of these two solutions is the same but with an extender you will likely need a different SSID requiring its own login. Third party testing has revealed which ones do the best job of covering dead zones. Need a little more help? Try Webopedia's SSID definition to get started.

8. Remove Obstructions to Improve Wi-Fi Signal Strength

        Just as one removes their sibling from their line of sight when trying to finish the last mission in Grand Theft Auto V on Xbox, it's a good idea to get rid of any obstructions which may be blocking your wi-fi signal. Placing your router in an elevated location helps too.

9. Choose the Right Wi-Fi Channel

        Breaker-breaker: get off this channel. Though most users don't change the channel on which their router is broadcasting Wi-Fi, it is possible to choose a different channel. For maximum throughput and minimum interference, independent research has shown channels 1, 6, and 11 to be the best choices. 

10. Use  inSSIDer to Maximize Your Wireless

        Third-party services such as inSIDDer allows a user to visualize their wireless environment in order to adjust one’s router settings for maximum performance. Diagnostic tools will help you determine if all your access points are visible, if you are on the right channels and evaluate your signal strength.

11. Stop Neighbors From Stealing Your Bandwidth

         It's not just your lawnmower and household tools that your neighbor won't return. They could, inadvertently of course, be stealing your bandwidth. Employing complicated passwords, using creative network SSID names and enabling network encryption are good starting points when making sure your bandwidth is not enjoyed by the noisy neighbors across the hall.

internet of Things : an imperative for digital era!!!



           The Internet of Things (IoT) is being hailed as the next frontier in the digital revolution, and with good reasons. To begin with, IoT can help companies increase productivity, cut costs, offer new products and services, and deploy new business models. As the world moves towards converging technologies, analysts predict that billions of devices will be able to communicate with each other—an ability that has the potential to dramatically enhance the quality of living and change the way we experience products around us.

          IoT is defined as a worldwide network of “things” that include identifiable devices, appliances, equipment, machinery of all forms and sizes with the intelligence to seamlessly connect, communicate and control or manage each other to perform a set of tasks with minimum intervention.

            The goal of IoT is to enable things to be connected anytime, anyplace and with anything or anyone. IoT is not a single technology, but a concept. IoT research has its roots in several domains including radio-frequency identification, machine-to-machine communication and machine-type communication, wireless sensor and actuator networks, ubiquitous computing, and the Web of Things. This is perhaps one reason that analysts also prefer to call it the Internet of Everything.

        IoT is increasingly gaining momentum. There is an increase in adoption of this next-generation technology due to the increasing urge for continuous connectivity, availability of versatile low-cost sensors, improved infrastructure with ongoing deployment of LTE (long-term evolution), Wi-Fi and small cell networks, huge volume of data and benefits of remote information and control, according to consulting firm EY. With its innate monitoring and analytics capabilities, IoT enables ubiquitous connectivity for businesses, governments and consumers.

           It helps the businesses in transforming existing processes (through improved productivity, better supply chain management, efficient asset utilization and analysis-based maintenance) and developing new business models (by enabling anything-as-a-service). It also enables faster decision- making, reduction in costs (fuel costs, employee cost, maintenance cost and human error costs) and enhanced customer base with improved experience, according to EY

            IoT is defined as a worldwide network of “things” that include identifiable devices, appliances, equipment, machinery of all forms and sizes with the intelligence to seamlessly connect, communicate and control or manage each other to perform a set of tasks with minimum intervention.


         The goal of IoT is to enable things to be connected anytime, anyplace and with anything or anyone. IoT is not a single technology, but a concept. IoT research has its roots in several domains including radio-frequency identification, machine-to-machine communication and machine-type communication, wireless sensor and actuator networks, ubiquitous computing, and the Web of Things. This is perhaps one reason that analysts also prefer to call it the Internet of Everything.


         IoT is increasingly gaining momentum. There is an increase in adoption of this next-generation technology due to the increasing urge for continuous connectivity, availability of versatile low-cost sensors, improved infrastructure with ongoing deployment of LTE (long-term evolution), Wi-Fi and small cell networks, huge volume of data and benefits of remote information and control, according to consulting firm EY. With its innate monitoring and analytics capabilities, IoT enables ubiquitous connectivity for businesses, governments and consumers.


        It helps the businesses in transforming existing processes (through improved productivity, better supply chain management, efficient asset utilization and analysis-based maintenance) and developing new business models (by enabling anything-as-a-service). It also enables faster decision- making, reduction in costs (fuel costs, employee cost, maintenance cost and human error costs) and enhanced customer base with improved experience, according to EY

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

The Difference Between the Internet and World Wide Web

           Many people use the terms Internet and World Wide Web (aka. the Web) interchangeably, but in fact the two terms are not synonymous. The Internet and the Web are two separate but related things.

What is The Internet ?

            The Internet is a massive network of networks, a networking infrastructure. It connects millions of computers together globally, forming a network in which any computer can communicate with any other computer as long as they are both connected to the Internet. Information that travels over the Internet does so via a variety of languages known as protocols.

What is The Web (World Wide Web) ?

        The World Wide Web, or simply Web, is a way of accessing information over the medium of the Internet. It is an information-sharing model that is built on top of the Internet. The Web uses the HTTP protocol, only one of the languages spoken over the Internet, to transmit data. Web services, which use HTTP to allow applications to communicate in order to exchange business logic, use the the Web to share information. The Web also utilizesbrowsers, such as Internet Explorer or Firefox, to access Web documents called Web pages that are linked to each other via hyperlinks. Web documents also contain graphics, sounds, text and video.

The Web is a Portion of The Internet

                    The Web is just one of the ways that information can be disseminated over the Internet. The Internet, not the Web, is also used for email, which relies on SMTPUsenet news groups, instant messaging and FTP. So the Web is just a portion of the Internet, albeit a large portion, but the two terms are not synonymous and should not be confused.