and guess what right after I got rid of it ironically I needed cables then I find out that cable is irreplaceable so my advice is DONT THROW THEM OUT LOL keep[ the junk drawer alive peeps lol
im totally out to lunch when it comes to hooking things up wirelessly lolAside from the cable that runs into my house to the main box, the rest of my place is cable free. It is completely wireless for all devices, including the TV.
I do have boosters plugged into outlets to ensure a strong signal throughout.
Years ago I had cables running all through the house. Nice to be rid of that crap as now I can place a TV anywhere without having to run a cable to it.
Lol same here. My office is a graveyard of old computer/phone/TV equipment going back 30+ years. I have old SCSI and IDE cables, hard drives, CD/DVD burners, Pentium motherboards, coax-analog cable adapters, and like 200ft of telephone cables plus some splitters of course.As an IT professional I have a box of cables and adapters I simply refuse to get rid of. You never know when someone will need to connect a Nokia 3310 to a fax machine.
Ubiquity AP's is what im using, never going back to mesh, routers or boostersAs an IT professional I have a box of cables and adapters I simply refuse to get rid of. You never know when someone will need to connect a Nokia 3310 to a fax machine.
As for the home network I run a combination of wired and wireless. Multiple access points around the house ensure no poor signal areas on my property. Access points are all hard wired back to my core switch. I also have a small 5 port switch by each TV in the house for wired connection of smart TVs, consoles etc. All my 'smart' devices are on their own isolated network with no access to my internal network where my computers, network attached storage etc. are.
Same here, the whole Ubiquiti lineup is pretty good. Particularly Protect, all the features of a cloud based camera system but without having to pay a subscription and you keep your data in your own infrastructure not on someone else's computer.Ubiquity AP's is what im using, never going back to mesh, routers or boosters
Technology is amazing but also worrisome. I sometimes wonder the amount of radiation running through my homeSame here, the whole Ubiquiti lineup is pretty good. Particularly Protect, all the features of a cloud based camera system but without having to pay a subscription and you keep your data in your own infrastructure not on someone else's computer.
I run a UDM Pro with 10GB uplink to 24 port switches on each floor. From those switches I link APs, 5 port switches and cameras as required, all powered by PoE, plus other network drops. A bit overkill but there are no connectivity or bandwidth restraints anywhere in the house.
Yes, that is why I try to hardwire as much as I can. Also, hard to hack a hardwired unit.Technology is amazing but also worrisome. I sometimes wonder the amount of radiation running through my home
I am lucky in that respect. My latest display has a USB hub in it, with 5 USB ports. 3 in the back and 2 on one edge.Every device seems to require a USB cable these days.
My home desk alone is a tangled web of 7 USB cables: