From time to time I suffer from rebuffering :-(
I tried some things and it seems that distance, some settings (dhcp,
encoding etc., mode type b or g) on access point doesnt influence on
it.
So I consider changing my setup and go for wired. The question is : is
only wifi installation affected by
It's not 100% guaranteed...it is 99.9% guaranteed. :-)
Ethernet has so much more bandwidth, you should never encounter a
rebuffering issue. About the only problem you'd ever encounter is a
bad cable, switch or NIC.
It's not affected by distance (not in a home anyway), interference,
competing
mirhon;408085 Wrote:
From time to time I suffer from rebuffering :-(
I tried some things and it seems that distance, some settings (dhcp,
encoding etc., mode type b or g) on access point doesnt influence on
it.
So I consider changing my setup and go for wired. The question is : is
only
I highly recommend wired. My SB3 worked fine for a couple of years,
then I began to have dropouts -- probably due to neighbors setting up
wireless networks, but who knows? I paid $100 for an alarm company to
run CAT-5 from my bedroom to my den (other end of the house). It was
money well spent.
Kyle wrote:
I highly recommend wired. My SB3 worked fine for a couple of years,
then I began to have dropouts -- probably due to neighbors setting up
wireless networks, but who knows? I paid $100 for an alarm company to
run CAT-5 from my bedroom to my den (other end of the house). It was
cdmackay;408179 Wrote:
Kyle wrote:
I highly recommend wired. My SB3 worked fine for a couple of years,
then I began to have dropouts -- probably due to neighbors setting
up
wireless networks, but who knows? I paid $100 for an alarm company
to
run CAT-5 from my bedroom to my den
mirhon;408085 Wrote:
From time to time I suffer from rebuffering :-(
I tried some things and it seems that distance, some settings (dhcp,
encoding etc., mode type b or g) on access point doesnt influence on
it.
So I consider changing my setup and go for wired. The question is : is
only