Yes you can. Its easy but, you need to be able to understand it.
can you connect wireless modem to a switch which will to two routers
Yes, you if you printer has network interface (NIC). u can connect them through routers or switch
Bridges, Switches and Routers will all separate collision domains.
It's called a switch. Many wireless routers have a 4-port switch. Also you can purchase a switch separately.
routers basicaly has 2 ports, one is uplink and 1 is downlink, is any1 is not assigned , anyone can be assisgned for connecting to the switch
It is very simple to install a dimmer switch in place of a regular light switch.
Routers operate at layer 3 of the OSI model while switches operate at layer 2. The data transmission form of a router is called a packet while in a switch, it is called a frame. Routers are mainly used in wide area networks while switches are used in local area networks.
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Either through the use of switch, hub, or an access point for wireless communications.
No, Most routers are specific to your internet provider. If your going to hard wire connections with cable from your existing router, you need an Ethernet switch. If you are adding closer wireless connection, that would be a wireless access point.
On shared-media networks (i.e. hubs or pure ethernets), routers break up broadcast domains and bridges break up collision domains. Routers also break up collision domains. On switched networks, routers break up broadcast domains, and every switch port is its own separate collision domain.
A network can function fairly easily with just one router, the router is used to access the internet and in small home it is also the network switch that connects all the home computers together. It is not necessary to connect 4 routers together on the same network because each router will try to assign an ip-adress to each of the computers on the network resulting in many conflicts. If you did want to do this type of network (depending on your circumstances, i know of schools that use routers as small network switches for each room) then I suggest that you disable DHCP and all server attributes of the routers. Then you use a star network configuration for the 4 routers that are connected elsewhere, use long Ethernet cables to link the routers to a network switch each; from there have the 2 remaining network switches in the same room and have them in a redundancy layout. Connect the 4 router and switch pairs to the redundancy pair. This network is very inefficient and very costly but you have the capability to join a small office to a larger office four times over in the same network. It is not recommended that you do this.