A wireless network signal travels through the use of radio waves. It is capable of travelling great distances in the open or shorter distances when penetrating walls and objects.
this depends on a few things the strenght of the signal that is being supplied, anything that's in the way i.e. walls and also interference from other electronics (i think that microwaves are pretty bad for disrupting signals). My wireless is only from a 2Mb signal and it goes though a few walls traveling about 10m and I'm ok but if your house is older and has thick stone walls then it wil be difficult to pick up the signal.
It emits a radio wave to the router and adapter and gives you wireless... But as it is radio waves it weakens through walls :!
Yes, anthough this will greatly decrease the range of the signal.
You need a wireless adapter and a special cheat the cheat is a,b,a,b,b,b,b,a left, left, right, left. That cheat will get you to go through walls.
Yes, But if you have a cheap adapter then it will be slower.
It's better to put it on open place far from metal walls and grids. Usual walls are not a problem for signal.
The range depends on the infrastructure of your house, but overall its 60ft and will be reduced by walls, celling, or other things in the way
When setting up a small office, it's sometimes easier to use a wireless adapter card in your desktop computer than trying to run network cables to set up your network. While it's not a perfect solution, in most installations, it can allow for a much easier and faster setup. Using a wireless network, you can position your computers where you want without worrying about running cables or drilling holes in the walls, floors, or ceilings. While laptops normally come with wireless capabilities built in, you'll need to usually install a wireless network adapter card in most PC's. The only caveat to using wireless in a home office is if there's something that blocks or interferes with the wireless signal. Then you'd have to resort to a wired connection.
The wireless router that I have needs to have a wired connection to the internet service and then devices can have a connection without a cable to the router.
it will have a sronger connection depending on how far you are and how many walls your wirless has to go through bbut if it's more than one wall then a wire will have a stronger signal but even cables have a range and will need a repeater
No, wireless items generally use low frequencies they can't harm you. That's why they don't work very well through walls