Franco wrote:
Do you by chance have plaster walls and ceilings? If so, there is probably a metal mesh embedded in the plaster


I'm not sure about the exact translation (I'm not a native English speaker)
but yes, my ceilings and some walls are made by a metal mesh embedded
in concrete


That metal mesh works as a pretty darned efficient farraday sheild, which means you'll only get decent signals in the same room, and in a line of sight from the door, and nowhere else.


That's exactly what happens


it is probably your house to blame, and not WiFi. So maybe you should change the subject to "STAY AWAY FROM OLD HOUSES WITH PLASTER WALLS AND CEILINGS!".


Uhmmm... yes, you are probably right but in practice, who will move to another house just to setup a mythbox? Also, in some countries
like here, most of the buildings, if not all, are made like that,
including new ones.

So I apologize again for the wrong all caps subject but as a matter of fact,
wether the guilt is to be attributed to wi-fi or to the building,
lots of people will experience the same problems if they'll try to setup wi-fi at home, and it's easier to stay away from wi-wi
than from their own home...

Franco


Ooo..ooo...just alter the physics of magnetizm and that should fix the
problem....:-)

--
Michael J. Lynch

What if the hokey pokey IS what it's all about -- author unknown

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