John Brown
Freeloading Social media influenza
You have a point. They're both electromagnetic waves, just one's a much higher frequency.I don't see it as Chalk and cheese as they both do the same job, communicate between two points.
You have a point. They're both electromagnetic waves, just one's a much higher frequency.I don't see it as Chalk and cheese as they both do the same job, communicate between two points.
Fibre optic is not electromagnetic it is light and emits no radiation waves, it is a passive path of communcation (for the most part depending on how technical it's application). If you say it is the same as wifi you might as well include two tin cans and a piece of string and say it's all the same, communication between two points as a catch all. Fibre is a communication link between two points of connection and cannot change, wifi will connect to as many points as the particular piece of equipment will allow.You have a point. They're both electromagnetic waves, just one's a much higher frequency.
https://byjus.com/question-answer/why-is-light-an-electromagnetic-wave/#Fibre optic is not electromagnetic it is light and emits no radiation waves, it is a passive path of communcation (for the most part depending on how technical it's application). If you say it is the same as wifi you might as well include two tin cans and a piece of string and say it's all the same, communication between two points as a catch all. Fibre is a communication link between two points of connection and cannot change, wifi will connect to as many points as the particular piece of equipment will allow.
There is no answer to that is there, I was talking about the real world not trying to split hairs.
I'm surprised. You seem to know a lot about this stuff, but light and RF are essentially electromagnetic waves in the real world. And I never said that light was the same as WiFi...There is no answer to that is there, I was talking about the real world not trying to split hairs.
You cannot put your WiFi router in the street before your property so you have to have it in your home. THE CABLE, WHICH DOES THAT, TERMINATES ON/IN YOUR BUILDING. You then connect to that termination. Optical and WiFi ARE NOT the same, even if they move the same data!I don't see it as Chalk and cheese as they both do the same job, communicate between two points.
Nothing really because the major difference is that with copper you are only dealing with electrical signals but with fibre you need to convert the optical signal into electrical which is where the ONT comes into play, I think of it as a modem that handles light transmision. At this point you have electrical signals suitable for your router and now WiFi but being old school I like to use hardwired via network switchs anyway as Fibrus use an Amazon Eero router with only a single port.What am I missing?
What you are missing is that it is the bit in bold which runs under the drive.I assume the Trolling comment above was directed at me, I obviously do not understand the problem, your service provider runs a fibre optic cable into your property and terminates inside your home/office, its at that point you attach a WiFi router to distribute the service to wherever you want? What am I missing?
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