Thanks for the great and extensive explanation, man. This helps some people in my community setting up their network in their homes. Lucky find this video of yours, just happens to be there when I open up youtube 😄 Keep up the good work.
Thanks for explaining the difference between the wifi speeds and capabilities and why for alot of home, the higher WIFIs might not be a practical needs.
If your home has coaxial cable throughout, I would opt to use a moca network before using power line to extend wire connections if you cannot install Ethernet.
6:50 If you are going to mention that cat8 is overkill at least include information about shielded cables because if you are in a high power or network environment, cat6 is still doesn’t always cut it and can have inconsistent results even disconnecting and reconnecting problems.
Should i replace the provider router with my choice like the one you recommend or just connect the new router to the provider. New to networking so pardon me
Replace the ISP router. Keep the modem obviously but a new wifi6e router will make a huge difference. If you need router recommendations I have a few in the description below. Thanks for watching!
Bro got a question if I don't have a ISP cable coming in to my home is it possible to make home network setup? Or can i use a router that supports sim cards for setting up a home network and get access to internet?
Both are a good option. I would always prefer a ISP cable coming into my house because its a more stable and secure connection and usually faster. Which local ISPs do you have in your area?
That's a very good idea. I will research and get back to you on that. My CISCO days we used some great software called packet tracer. Maybe give it a look. Thanks for watching!
Great Video!!! I have Starlink and plan to build a home network in a one story 2,700 sq/ft home and separate building 30 yds away. Any recommendations or things I should be considering?
Awesome video! Very very detailed. I was just wondering whether it is worth to replace my Tenda Nova MW6 mesh routers to access point. Today I got the ISP modem + an unmanaged switch routering the connection to the mesh routers (I got 2).
If your wi-fi signal works well then I would leave it alone. If you need more speed and better coverage then wireless access points are fantastic! Thanks for watching I really appreciate it!
Love the series concept but I can't handle how many video cuts you use man, my brain doesn't like jumping every 3 seconds. You seem to have a good thing going though for other folks, good luck.
I've used an electrical line extender from my living room to my gaming room which is a small room outside my house. The price I've paid is that I'm only able to enjoy 1/10th of my ISP speed. What reco can you give me so I can extend an ethernet cable from living room to gaming room?
Here is a video that might help. If not, please send me another comment with your questions. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VVbUIis78uQ.html
@@UltimateTechHub thank you..I had a look at the video, the problem is that you're going from one room to another directly opposite and they are wall to wall. In my case, the cable I want to install has to physically leave the house, and go to a small room outside the house
@vashnator I would run some heavy duty cat6 or cat6a in conduit or some sort of PVC. If you can run along a wall that would be great. Otherwise you could run it in trench. Just make sure the pipes are water tight
Thank you for the video! I have a gigabit fiber connection that I pay dearly for. Currently supplying one neighbor via a wired connection and want to securely connect three more neighbors via cat 6 and a edge router and v-lans. My ISP uses a edge router for a modem. I know just enough about networking to get myself in trouble and, therefore, would be willing to pay you to help me design a network and get it up and running.
lets say a hypothetical i have a 1 router with a 5 Lan ports connected to ISP provided device, my router connects to an 8 port switch (netgear unmanaged), this connects to a filedump nas which then connects to a 40tb nas and 24 tb Nas, i find the throughput when copying from file dump to othe NAS drops a lot until i reboot the switch. is there an optimal daisy ring scenario ? my file dump is connected to router others to switch
The optimal way I would do this is to get a 10gig managed switch instead of the unmanaged switch. You can control the throughput through each individual port and assign QoS and many other settings. Unmanaged switches are great for simple day to day tasks but your situation requires more data control. Tp-Link makes some affordable managed switches with 10gig ports. Keep me posted and thank you for watching I really appreciate it.
LMAO, I felt he was more my speed, lol. I hate when people go too slow... but I can see how it could be confusing if you're not very tech-savvy. Lmfao drink a cup of coffee while watching it 🤣
a lot of useless info, all we want is just a simple how to hard wire up a few outlets and a couple of wi fi outlets, not some over rated spagetti worm factory
I make these videos to share what I have learned over the last 5 years and its a pleasure to share my knowledge. Thank you for watching and for the kind comments!