F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Minimize Data Dropped Optimize transmission methods Improve network reliability

Minimize Data Dropped Optimize transmission methods Improve network reliability

Minimize Data Dropped Optimize transmission methods Improve network reliability

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HiperEg
Member
152
02-26-2021, 05:18 PM
#1
Hi everyone!, I travel often for work and rely heavily on hotel Wi-Fi to connect my devices. I usually bring my gaming laptop to enjoy games during my free time, though I sometimes face packet loss in online games which is really annoying. I’m considering getting a WiFi router with strong QoS settings as a solution, but I’m not very familiar with networking so any advice would be great. Thanks!
H
HiperEg
02-26-2021, 05:18 PM #1

Hi everyone!, I travel often for work and rely heavily on hotel Wi-Fi to connect my devices. I usually bring my gaming laptop to enjoy games during my free time, though I sometimes face packet loss in online games which is really annoying. I’m considering getting a WiFi router with strong QoS settings as a solution, but I’m not very familiar with networking so any advice would be great. Thanks!

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Niile
Junior Member
18
03-05-2021, 06:49 PM
#2
Using your own access point could be useful only if it links to a hotel-provided wired port. (If available, simply connect your laptop there.) If it shares the same WiFi network as your current connection, it won't change much. Because free hotel WiFi often has speed limits, reduce unnecessary data usage from your PC—avoid running games, close unused background apps, or opt for a paid plan for better performance.
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Niile
03-05-2021, 06:49 PM #2

Using your own access point could be useful only if it links to a hotel-provided wired port. (If available, simply connect your laptop there.) If it shares the same WiFi network as your current connection, it won't change much. Because free hotel WiFi often has speed limits, reduce unnecessary data usage from your PC—avoid running games, close unused background apps, or opt for a paid plan for better performance.

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cookiedough909
Posting Freak
782
03-05-2021, 07:24 PM
#3
QoS requires full control over all traffic on that connection. Hotel Wi-Fi is almost always congested, so fixing it isn't possible. I've noticed my phone works better than the hotel's internet—even when browsing was barely functional, I wouldn't have tried gaming. Connecting to my home VPN was frustrating. Using a router as a client might boost signal strength and speed, possibly reducing latency and packet loss if the issue is weak signal. However, if the problem is network overload, you're stuck.
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cookiedough909
03-05-2021, 07:24 PM #3

QoS requires full control over all traffic on that connection. Hotel Wi-Fi is almost always congested, so fixing it isn't possible. I've noticed my phone works better than the hotel's internet—even when browsing was barely functional, I wouldn't have tried gaming. Connecting to my home VPN was frustrating. Using a router as a client might boost signal strength and speed, possibly reducing latency and packet loss if the issue is weak signal. However, if the problem is network overload, you're stuck.

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InTheFlesh
Member
56
03-06-2021, 12:31 AM
#4
Another device added to the network won’t fix the internet issue. Occasionally, a business office in the hotel has stronger wired connections, but simply installing a new router in your room won’t help.
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InTheFlesh
03-06-2021, 12:31 AM #4

Another device added to the network won’t fix the internet issue. Occasionally, a business office in the hotel has stronger wired connections, but simply installing a new router in your room won’t help.