No Signal: Homes Often Baffle Wi-Fi From Routers

By GEOFFREY A. FOWLER
DECEMBER 23, 2010

Technology companies are touting wireless homes, where we can 
download a book in the tub and beam a movie from a tablet to the 
television set. But too often, that potential doesn't live up to the 
reality of sluggish and flaky wireless networks.

My apartment has more than a dozen devices that feed off the network: 
two laptops, a printer, an e-reader, wireless speakers, two 
smartphones, an iPad and more. Yet getting gadgets to connect to my 
two-year-old wireless router is a dark art. I can surf the Web on the 
street in front of my house, yet can't get a signal sitting in bed. 
In desperation, I even tried dangling a router-the equipment that 
takes your Internet connection and shares it with the devices in your 
home-from the ceiling in an effort to distance it from interfering 
walls.

Surely, covering a whole apartment is a problem that the decade-old 
Wi-Fi industry can solve. So I tested four top-of-the-line home 
wireless routers, each of which features the latest generation 
dual-band "wireless N" technology designed to increase performance.

The result was disappointing. None of the routers could deliver a 
100% consistent wireless experience that could take advantage of the 
latest technology, like Apple's AirPlay media-streaming service.

...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704774604576035691589888786.html

http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20101222/no-signal-homes-often-baffle-wi-fi-from-routers/

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