Here’s How You Can Get WiFi to Every Part of Your House, Even the ‘Dead Zones’

Even if you pay for WiFi, you may not be able to access the internet from all corners of your home, thanks to those dreaded “dead zones.”

Dead zones are areas of a building that don’t receive a WiFi signal. This can be due to a number of reasons, such as physical barriers.

If you’re tired of suddenly losing your connection when you go into a certain room, try one of these handy solutions, courtesy of Popular Science.

Photo Credit: iStock

One thing to keep in mind is that your router should be somewhere toward the center of your home. It should also be as close as possible to the devices that will need it. This may seem obvious, but sometimes, a simple relocation of your router can do the trick.

When you’re choosing a new location, note that WiFi signals have trouble crossing concrete and brick walls. Certain devices can also have an effect on the signal, including microwaves, baby monitors, large fish tanks and Christmas tree lights.

And if you feel limited to putting your router in one spot due to the location of the internet feed, you can always buy a longer connecting cable so that your router can reach the wall from further away.

Photo Credit: iStock

You may also want to simply switch out your router for a better, stronger one.

Some companies, such as Google, even offer routers that come with multiple devices automatically, instead of just one. Check out Google Wifi.

You can also try a device to extend the range of your WiFi, such as a WiFi extender, WiFi repeater, WiFi booster, or range extender.

The most effective device for extending the signal, though, is a powerline adapter. This device uses your home’s electrical wiring to transmit WiFi signals to any room in the house. All you need is an outlet that will fit an adapter! This solution can be pricey, but it works well for high speeds. If speed isn’t an issue, WiFi repeaters also work for a cheaper price.

Photo Credit: iStock

Lastly, you may want to go old school by using a wired connection instead of just WiFi. Hook up the dead zones with wired connections of their own by simply running a long Ethernet cable from the router into the room (you may need some pins to hold the cable in place). Then set up a second router or a wireless access point on the other end.

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The first person to stream…

The first person to stream their life on the internet was Jennifer Ringley aka Jennicam, a 19 year old woman who from 1996, broadcasted her life from her college dorm room 24/7. At its peak, she got 7 million hits per day, a significant proportion of the internet at the time.

These 10 People Believe They Can Sell Lame Stuff on the Internet for Big Bucks

Have you ever looked at your old junk and thought someone could probably use that? You sure as hell aren’t going to throw away a perfectly good, but stained and smelly armchair. Hey, one man’s trash is another’s treasure, right?

If so, you may be delusional like these folks. Scroll past these 10 things that other delusional people are trying to unload on the internet and judge for yourself what you think your crap is still worth.

I think you may change your mind.

1. Air IS essential to our survival.

ah yes, air.. from delusionalcraigslist

2. Vintage is French for “jack up the price.”

3. Get that screen fixed and it’s good as new.

4. Keeping dryer drums and broken chairs out of landfills.

5. Sure, price your used dress higher than what you paid.

View post on imgur.com

6. $18?? Maybe for fire sauce.

7. Have any Coke?

8. It seems like a good deal until you check the shipping rates.

9. How can it be “fir” sale when it’s so filthy?

10. Is this how Uber Eats got started?

Hopefully, you know your crap is crap and none of this crap interested you. You have a great life. Go out there and live it.

But before you go… which of these did you think was the most delusional? On the other hand… would you shell out your money for any of these?

Let us know in the comments!

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15 Tweets From Mid-2000s Kids

Ahhhhhh, remember those halycon days of yesteryear? You were a tween (or teen) and everything just made perfect sense! It was the mid-2000s and life was awesome! The internet was actually kind of fast finally, TV looked better than ever and companies sent you DVDs in the mail! Oh, and you also had no bills and really had no responsibilities.

Can’t we time travel to back then and just stay there forever?

No? Okay, we’ll just have to settle for these tweets.

16. What is reading?!?

15. Curls get the gurls…

14. This is so specific, but I feel like so many people did it!

13. Yeah, this is super “old”…

12. “Just be quiet Sharon! We don’t want the Tiffanys to know!”

11. Ahhh, to be 6 again…

10. Why do you let them do it today?

9. Come on, we’re all emo! Right franges!

8. So middle

7. My memories are proof of your shame. Always remember that.

6. He cared.

5. What am I supposed to do with these people?!

4. Oh yes. This was a thing we all did. ALL of us.

3. Okay, but The Cat In the Hat was particularly weird.

2. O_O

1. The coolest song of your youth.

See! That was like a teleportation back to the best years of your life.

You’re welcome!

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Passive internet use…

Passive internet use (looking at stuff but not posting) affects your well-being in a more negative way than active internet use (commenting and posting).

5 Internet Rabbit Holes You Could Easily Get Lost in

I do it. You do it. We all do it. You go down an Internet rabbit hole and spend hours upon hours researching one subject because you just never knew there was so much to learn about underwater basket weaving!

My personal current favorite is The Charley Project. It’s terrifying and spooky, especially if you read the stories before you go to bed at night.

Here are 5 more Internet rabbit holes that you might get totally obsessed with.

1. The family that couldn’t sleep

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Okay, this is a really weird story. Fatal insomnia? Does it get any more terrifying than that?

Start with the link above and then descend into this creepy rabbit hole.

2. The Worst Thing For Sale

This website features the absolute worst things for sale online! And it’s updated every. Single. Day.

3. Uncontacted peoples

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

We think we know it all, but we really have a lot to learn about our fellow humans. Like: did you know there are still uncontacted tribes out there that have no idea about modern civilization?

Fascinating…

4. Timeline of the far future

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

This page offers an interesting and kind of horrifying vision of what will happen to the world in the future. This stuff kind of makes me want to hide under my bed for a while.

5. Two Weird/Spooky Wikipedia Sites

Photo Credit: Public Domain

These are right up my alley. Wikipedia’s Unusual Articles page is exactly what it sounds like. Weird, creepy, flat-out unusual. Trust me, you’ll get lost on here.

The other is Wikipedia’s Unusual Deaths page. Oh yeah, this is good stuff.

Give these a shot…and I’ll see you in about a month…

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10 Pictures That’ll Remind You of the Internet’s Early Years

Remember the early days of the internet? Before YouTube was ever a thing, before Netflix or Hulu or Facebook. What did we even DO back then?

Here are 10 pictures that will bring back memories of the good old days, when the dial-up was slow and life was simple.

1. Internet or no internet, we were all obsessed with Pinball and Microsoft Paint. Minesweeper was a bit out of our depth, but we tried anyways.

2. Photoshop will never live up to the glory of editing photos on Picnik.

3. When it would take literally decades to download something.

4. Remember how different the Sims used to look? With cheat codes, our Sims had the lives we dreamed of – until they accidentally died in a house fire, that is.

5. When iPods were too expensive, but our favorite songs were too irresistible to leave on our computers… that’s where digital MP3 players came in.

6. The allure of making yourself and your friends into Dollz, complete with the clothes and hairstyles you actually wanted.

7. MySpace was the place, and keeping our profiles fresh and fashionable was top priority.

8. Solitaire was neat, but nothing could beat the error-screen game.

9. We all needed copies of the songs we heard on the radio. And so, we lit our torches and ventured into the virus-infested dungeon of Limewire.

10. As we logged on to choose a new Windows icon, we were greeted by the sweet, sweet sound of the XP startup.

Ahhh, the good old days.

What will our grandkids think?

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Rock Star David Bowie Once Launched His Own Internet Service To Rival AOL

David Bowie was a legend in our time, the likes of whom we may never see again. His genius knew few bounds. He was well-loved as a star of stage and screen, but it turns out he was also a bit of a tech visionary!

Back in 1998, David Bowie, international rock star extraordinaire, made a pretty bold announcement – he was launching his own internet service! Called BowieNet, the platform aimed to unite music fans around the world with uncensored access to the internet, as well as plenty of exclusive content found on www.davidbowie.com.

Photo Credit: Flickr

Users would get a customizable home page, an email address (your.name@davidbowie.com), groups, chat capabilities, gaming and more.

Pretty much Facebook, except run by David Bowie, which makes it better.

It all started when two internet pioneers, Robert Goodale and Ron Roy, came to Bowie with an idea. How about an online fan club that would also be an internet service provider? Bowie was already using email and digital releases to reach his fan base, so he was psyched to give it a go.

The competition? America Online.

So, the laughter settled, Bowie went to work on his vision. Older folks will remember receiving CD-ROMs in the mail, finding them delivered with their pizzas or a few of them falling out of magazines offering free trials of AOL. But Bowie wanted to experiment with his CD-ROM. He created 3D-rendered environments, music and videos, along with the customized Internet Explorer browser. Some material couldn’t even be accessed except for online.

He also interacted with fans, posting as “Sailor” on message boards and hosting live chats.

Bowie had big plans for his brand of early social media. But when dial-up internet disintegrated, his 100,000 subscribers trickled away. BowieNet shut down in 2006. No one much noticed. The announcement wasn’t even made until 2012. Ironically, the post appeared on Bowie’s own Facebook page.

Photo Credit: Facebook

Bowie made a career out of being revolutionary. His accomplishments with BowieNet foreshadowed everything internet users are offered now.  He couldn’t have known the power the internet would ultimately have in the music business. But he saw the potential and jumped in like he did with everything in his glitzy life.

Imagine if he launched BowieNet during the Ziggy Stardust days.

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France had a “proto-internet” called Minitel…

France had a “proto-internet” called Minitel, to which half the population had access. It allowed for buying plane tickets, shopping, 24-hr news, message boards & adult chat services. It was used to coordinate a national strike in 1986. Some believe it hindered the internet’s adoption in France. 00