My girlfriend just moved into very small house. The house has 2 rooms - a kitchen and a bedroom. There are two others exactly like hers within a 20 or 30 ft distance. One on the left, one in the center, one on the right. We know the other tenants very, very well.
The landlord is cheap and makes them get P.O. Boxes (yes, there is a point to this story.) Because of this, all three houses are considered one residential address.
We brokered up a deal that we were going to split up an internet and cable bundle package 3 ways. The internet package offers download speeds of up to 30 Mbps and upload speeds of up to 2 Mbps. Monthly data usage allowance - 350 gigabytes. Since the three houses are considered as one address, the cable company verified that they could in fact run a single line and it work on all three houses. Personally, she will be using her tablet on WiFi, Netflix (on a Wii), and her laptop. Let's just assume everyone is running the same configuration on their side as well.
My questions about this are:
1. Is the internet going to be dreadfully slow when all three tenants are using the WiFi?
2. Is there a (very) powerful router you'd recommend to extend the signal strength to where everybody would get a strong signal?
3. If a router wouldn't do the trick, is there some sort of signal extension?
4. Is there a possibility to split the network into 3 separate networks to ensure security?
I understand that this is a lot of information. I'm not asking any one person to answer all four questions, but any help would be greatly appreciated from anyone. I'll try and check back every few hours to keep the responses flowing.
Thanks again.
EDIT: When searching for routers, what is a spec to look for to fit my scenario? What spec tells how far or strong a signal strength is?
The landlord is cheap and makes them get P.O. Boxes (yes, there is a point to this story.) Because of this, all three houses are considered one residential address.
We brokered up a deal that we were going to split up an internet and cable bundle package 3 ways. The internet package offers download speeds of up to 30 Mbps and upload speeds of up to 2 Mbps. Monthly data usage allowance - 350 gigabytes. Since the three houses are considered as one address, the cable company verified that they could in fact run a single line and it work on all three houses. Personally, she will be using her tablet on WiFi, Netflix (on a Wii), and her laptop. Let's just assume everyone is running the same configuration on their side as well.
My questions about this are:
1. Is the internet going to be dreadfully slow when all three tenants are using the WiFi?
2. Is there a (very) powerful router you'd recommend to extend the signal strength to where everybody would get a strong signal?
3. If a router wouldn't do the trick, is there some sort of signal extension?
4. Is there a possibility to split the network into 3 separate networks to ensure security?
I understand that this is a lot of information. I'm not asking any one person to answer all four questions, but any help would be greatly appreciated from anyone. I'll try and check back every few hours to keep the responses flowing.
Thanks again.
EDIT: When searching for routers, what is a spec to look for to fit my scenario? What spec tells how far or strong a signal strength is?
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