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dawgal
Member
126
08-26-2023, 12:14 AM
#1
Back then, my boss wasn’t particularly fond of giving away free services. However, pressure from his wife and some employees forced him to offer free Wi-Fi at the store. It was slow, using dial-up technology. Now that I’m older and more informed, I realize how challenging it must have been to make that work. It probably involved some kind of network bridging solution.
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dawgal
08-26-2023, 12:14 AM #1

Back then, my boss wasn’t particularly fond of giving away free services. However, pressure from his wife and some employees forced him to offer free Wi-Fi at the store. It was slow, using dial-up technology. Now that I’m older and more informed, I realize how challenging it must have been to make that work. It probably involved some kind of network bridging solution.

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_ShadowX
Junior Member
47
08-26-2023, 01:43 AM
#2
I've never considered it... but why not? Just place a Wi-Fi router in front of the modem and you'll have internet. It might seem a bit tricky, but I'm not sure it won't work.
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_ShadowX
08-26-2023, 01:43 AM #2

I've never considered it... but why not? Just place a Wi-Fi router in front of the modem and you'll have internet. It might seem a bit tricky, but I'm not sure it won't work.

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Poop_Head27
Posting Freak
820
08-31-2023, 08:57 PM
#3
I've switched between dial-up and Wi-Fi before, but there are some issues. It still uses a modem, and then a router broadcasts the signal.
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Poop_Head27
08-31-2023, 08:57 PM #3

I've switched between dial-up and Wi-Fi before, but there are some issues. It still uses a modem, and then a router broadcasts the signal.

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ggamer76
Junior Member
46
09-01-2023, 05:41 AM
#4
But what? Ten years ago mobile connections were slower than dial-up ever was. Even older technologies like Edge and GPRS lagged behind.
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ggamer76
09-01-2023, 05:41 AM #4

But what? Ten years ago mobile connections were slower than dial-up ever was. Even older technologies like Edge and GPRS lagged behind.

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Valkxz
Member
212
09-06-2023, 11:00 AM
#5
Are you certain it was dial-up rather than the initial DSL era? Both rely on phone lines. Roughly speaking, during dial-up the 56K modem was built into the PC as a PCI card—no separate external unit. To extend that link you’d have to route it through Windows with a wireless adapter, similar to how we’d turn a laptop/PC into a hotspot while still connected to the modem, router, or switch.
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Valkxz
09-06-2023, 11:00 AM #5

Are you certain it was dial-up rather than the initial DSL era? Both rely on phone lines. Roughly speaking, during dial-up the 56K modem was built into the PC as a PCI card—no separate external unit. To extend that link you’d have to route it through Windows with a wireless adapter, similar to how we’d turn a laptop/PC into a hotspot while still connected to the modem, router, or switch.