Good thing to add another wifi access point in the house ^^
Their other problem is that they send a MHz signal through UNSHIELDED wires, and thus your whole wiring becomes an antenna, which is worse than wifi interference wise.
I laugh at those who use this because wifi is "too much radio waves"...
Thanks for the review guys, just bought one of these yesterday (at inflated Argos prices unfortunately), but it works brilliantly - no more flakey wirless connection. ;)
I've been using powerline networking in my house for a few years. Its a perfect replacement for wireless which has never worked more than a few meters away from the AP for some reason. Its a bottleneck when moving large files, but I dont use my network for that anyway.
Power Line Adapters (PLAs) whilst seemingly a good solution to home
networking are essentially a very poor technology. They pollute the
radio spectrum, interfere with your neighborsâ radio (preventing
reception of Short Wave broadcasts) and do not adhere to the European
EMC directives.
They rely upon your internal house wiring to pass signals between
units. Unfortunately, your house wiring is a good aerial and these
signals go far beyond your house, many 100s of yards and in some cases
get into external telephone lines and street wiring and have even been
known to radiate from lamp posts. The units effectively become the
same as an illegal radio transmitter.
The government and OFCOM know the problems regarding PLAs and will
respond when complaints are made by your neighbours, by removing the
devices, so please ensure that the retailer has a sale or return
policy. In a lot of cases involving BT, this translates to BT
replacing the PLAs with CAT5 cabling.
Home networking has a perfectly good wireless system based on the IEEE
802.11 standard (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11). This
is commonly called WiFi and operates at frequencies (2.4GHz) that do
not interfere with other equipment. It is legal, adheres to all
European EMC directives and allows you to transfer your broadband and
gaming system throughout the house.
There are campaigns afoot both at local and governmental level to have
PLAs removed from the shops and banned. Australia has already taken
steps to ban PLA devices.
So in reality, they are not such a good idea after all.
Home networking has a perfectly good wireless system based on the IEEE
802.11 standard (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11). This
is commonly called WiFi and operates at frequencies (2.4GHz) that do
not interfere with other equipment. It is legal, adheres to all
European EMC directives and allows you to transfer your broadband and
gaming system throughout the house.
Err, no it doesn't. It allows you to network PC's in the same room (just), but any further than that and my (apparently lead-lined) walls block the signal.
Comments 26 to 30 of 30
Their other problem is that they send a MHz signal through UNSHIELDED wires, and thus your whole wiring becomes an antenna, which is worse than wifi interference wise.
I laugh at those who use this because wifi is "too much radio waves"...
networking are essentially a very poor technology. They pollute the
radio spectrum, interfere with your neighborsâ radio (preventing
reception of Short Wave broadcasts) and do not adhere to the European
EMC directives.
They rely upon your internal house wiring to pass signals between
units. Unfortunately, your house wiring is a good aerial and these
signals go far beyond your house, many 100s of yards and in some cases
get into external telephone lines and street wiring and have even been
known to radiate from lamp posts. The units effectively become the
same as an illegal radio transmitter.
The government and OFCOM know the problems regarding PLAs and will
respond when complaints are made by your neighbours, by removing the
devices, so please ensure that the retailer has a sale or return
policy. In a lot of cases involving BT, this translates to BT
replacing the PLAs with CAT5 cabling.
Home networking has a perfectly good wireless system based on the IEEE
802.11 standard (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11). This
is commonly called WiFi and operates at frequencies (2.4GHz) that do
not interfere with other equipment. It is legal, adheres to all
European EMC directives and allows you to transfer your broadband and
gaming system throughout the house.
There are campaigns afoot both at local and governmental level to have
PLAs removed from the shops and banned. Australia has already taken
steps to ban PLA devices.
So in reality, they are not such a good idea after all.
Err, no it doesn't. It allows you to network PC's in the same room (just), but any further than that and my (apparently lead-lined) walls block the signal.