• @ParanoidPizzas@aussie.zone
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    491 year ago

    When I was 15, my dad purchased me a plaster saw (still have it) and handed me his drill.

    Then told me to make it look neat, but “don’t fuck up because your mother will kill us both”.

    I ran about 4 network points through the house.

    Nothing like fear to produce a 100% perfect finish 😉

    • TehDreamer
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      151 year ago

      And then there’s me who just screwed up installing a new door knob. I stripped the threads on the screws cause I used the wrong size screws drilling. Now if the new knob fails in the future, I need to buy a new door lmao

      • @helixdaunting@lemm.ee
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        201 year ago

        If it’s a wooden door that you’re screwing into, dab some match sticks with a little bit of liquid nails and gently hammer them into the stripped-out screw hole, and cut them flush with the hole. Once the glue dries, you can drive the screw back into the matches and it’ll have enough wood to bite into.

        • @ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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          51 year ago

          People are getting hung up on the “liquid nails” when I think any old carpenter’s glue would work.

          You don’t even need any adhesive if you simply shove in a toothpick or two before screwing in the screw. Remember: you don’t need to completely fill the hole, just enough to fill in the space between the too-big screw and the right-sized screw

          • TheForvalaka
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            31 year ago

            This is true in many cases - just break up some toothpicks or matchsticks to partially fill the over enlarged hole, and drive the screw right in.

            Often for small repairs like that, the pressure and friction of the wood being compressed is more than enough to hold.

        • KSP Atlas
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          51 year ago

          assuming liquid nails means molten metal, I don’t think that’s easily accessible in most homes

        • TehDreamer
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          21 year ago

          I’m new to DIY home fixes. Will try this out cause I am, using a wooden door. Thanks for the tip!

      • @Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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        81 year ago

        If you can, re-use existing sockets! Old telephone or antenna lines can work! You tie the cable to the end of the old cable and pull it through the existing PVC pipe.

        • @ccunix@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          That’s exactly what I am about to do in the house we’re signing for in few weeks (waiting for the attorney to give us an appointment).

          When I saw the phone jack’s in every room, all terminating down in the garage, I just figured it would be rude not too. Seeing as we will have 2Gb fibre, it makes sense

        • @sneezymrmilo@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Using old phone lines is exactly what I did for my parents house, worked like a charm. Highly recommend if you don’t need the phone lines anymore.

          • @ccunix@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Even if you do need a couple, run Cat6 anyway. RJ15 is a subset of RJ45, so it is simply a question of how you patch it at the other end.

      • @ParanoidPizzas@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        This was an older stumped house. The way I did it was to remove a power point, look in the wall cavity for where the cable came up out of the floor in the cavity space, and then assuming there was no obstruction, I then got under the floor and drilled up. In most cases I was able to stay a good 20cm or so away from the power cable. Worked a charm. I was paranoid if I got it wrong I’d be drilling right up through the actual floor.

        Nowadays, doing the same at my own house… Cut the plaster. Run cable. Patch plaster. No stuffing around with the slowly slowly approach 🤷‍♂️

        • @ParanoidPizzas@aussie.zone
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          11 year ago

          Nowadays, doing the same at my own house… Cut the plaster. Run cable. Patch plaster. No stuffing around with the slowly slowly approach 🤷‍♂️

  • @thehatfox@lemmy.world
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    221 year ago

    A tale as old as time. Before Ethernet cables we were running phone extension cables through the house to connect up the modem to the only phone jack.

  • @Gojiras_Rage@lemmy.world
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    191 year ago

    I had to buy carpets to hide the cable under them when running across the floor. Only exposed parts go through the doorways, and the wife complains about them. Well, I am not complaining about our craptastic wifi anymore.

    • teft
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      181 year ago

      If you own your house you could learn to pull cable and how to do punchdowns. It’s not a super difficult job. That way you could impress the lady of the house with your technical skills while also hiding the mess.

      • @atx_aquarian@lemmy.world
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        151 year ago

        In my experience, the part about hiding the mess is all she cared about, as long as “the internet still works.”

        But you will always look at that wall jack and feel great about it while always having the lowest latency and highest throughput you can possibly get, and that will always impress yourself!

      • @jdaxe@infosec.pub
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        51 year ago

        I’d be careful giving broad advice like this.

        In my country (Australia) it’s illegal to run cabling yourself unless you’re a registered cabler.

      • Honestly for newbies I always recommend inline couplers instead of punchdowns. Still meets electrical code in areas where you can’t run a cable through a wall (wiring only) and allows for the use of non-crimped cables so the barrier to entry is far lower. It’s not like most houses are at risk of hitting the length limits for Ethernet runs anyway.

  • @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    151 year ago

    I did this for every device in my house. used flat ethernet cable and just fished it under the carpets. Was significantly cheaper than trying to make wireless reach the other side of the house.

      • @panda_paddle@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        You can also buy devices you plug into the wall and route your network through your power network. Used them to give my detached garage wifi. Works pretty well.

        • @Fordry@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          Can be unreliable though based on what else is on the circuit. Had a portable ac that completely took my power line ethernet connection out whenever it ran.

        • @Glork@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Based on my research, you get the speed of 2.4 ghz wireless (which while it works, it could be better) with the inconvenience of having to use a cable. Performance also depends on wire insulation, which often isn’t built for running PLC. However, you can’t beat the “plug-and-play” of wired there, which might be attractive.

          I’d recommend getting a mesh router setup, gives you 5ghz wireless over the whole house (assuming proper setup), and some mesh points support wired output (effectively having a wireless bridge)

      • @Rannoch@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        Yeah they’re great! I got a super long flat white one and those little white plastic staple things you can lightly hammer into the wall, and ran it along the baseboard of the walls, makes it nearly invisible! It was a bit tedious to do (which is why I haven’t yet redone it in the place I live now, although I will), but honestly I super recommend it. My partner wanted to try and run cords through the walls but I was way too nervous about what might go wrong, so found this solution instead lol

  • @Wooly@lemmy.world
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    121 year ago

    Do people not know power line ethernet adapters are a thing? Look if up on Amazon, you just plug one into the wall by your router and one next to your PC. Clean and strong connections.

    • @BURN@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      There’s a few caveats to this. I had a good set of powerline adapters that still ended up with worse performance than a usb wireless dongle.

      If the outlets are in different circuits or you have a house with old wiring there’s a good chance they won’t work

      • @Wooly@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        Granted I’ve only used it in 2/3 houses but they’ve always given me the best speed, at least in the past 5-10 years. They used to be much worse if you’re basing this on old experience. And also the oldest house I used them in only got 2MBps so it wasn’t exactly hard for them to get to top speed. My current place isn’t exactly new wiring and the copper cables still get my max speed of 11MBps.

        Yeah you won’t get the full experience of gigabit connection through copper wall cables but I’ve never lived in a place with fast enough WiFi for that to matter. I much prefer a cable free house, I have a power cable going to my server in a cupboard and I really hate it, wish there was a power socket in there.

        • @suodrazah@lemmy.ml
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          41 year ago

          That’s fine if you’re simply trying to max out your net, but for large internal file transfers EoP are a nuisance vs GbE.

        • @V4uban@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Depending on the model, and your electric network, you might get some disconnects though. Had that at my parents years ago, ended up doing exactly what the meme is

    • @Reken@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      From my experience, power line adapters are very hit or miss depending on your house setup. I’ve had power line adapters that couldn’t even get above 10 Mbps. I feel like the next best thing besides just straight up Ethernet cables is something called MoCA adapters. They use the already existing (in most houses) coax cables, which allow for much higher throughput and very consistent connection. I’ve had peaks of 850-900 Mbps with 10ms latency using MoCA adapters.

      • @money_loo@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Yep. Got one transferring 1 gig fiber between floors, and the upstairs regularly gets full speed through it. Highly recommended if you can do it.

    • This is as dumb as asking if people don’t know wifi exists. Yeah, pretty much everyone knows, but it has substantial tradeoffs to just running a long cat6 cable, one of which likely is plain cost.

      • @money_loo@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Just be careful, they can be pretty expensive and often way way slower than advertised.

        The main reasons I use them are places you lack WiFi coverage, where reliability is more important than speed.

        • kungfusion
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          21 year ago

          I’m guessing Ethernet would be transmitted over the electrical wiring? if that’s the case, if your house have different circuits it wouldn’t work?

      • @money_loo@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        If your house is wired for cable and you’re not using it, they also have MOCA which is way way better.

        Coax cables are wicked fast and you can use them alongside network switches to get LAN all sorts of places you’d normally have issues.

      • @Wooly@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        They’re good/reliable enough that it’s worth the £20-30 to try a set out. Although like another guy commented bad wall wiring can sometimes have effects if your router is really fast, I get my full 11MBps through my walls easily enough in relatively old housing.

        • 11mbps, even if that’s megabytes not bits, is pretty fuckin slow as far as network speeds today. That’s either 1/100th or 1/10th of gigabit speeds, and a good Ethernet cable can provide well over gigE nowadays

          • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Which only really matters if your actual internet connection can do the same.

            Or in other words, it depends, so each one should try to get the right solution for their situation.

            • @stevestevesteve@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I didn’t realize that the only thing people used network connections for was Internet connections. Wow thanks for letting me know.

              Lots of ISPs offer way more than 100mbps, many places offer past 1gbps. Even if they don’t, there are many LAN-based things that run even if you don’t know they do. P2p software updates are widespread now. So yeah “it depends” on whether you care about a fast and stable network connection.

              Not to mention, power line is a shared medium, much like wifi, so if you have two computers, kiss even your already slow speeds goodbye

              • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                First, I suggest you read the last 12 words of my post rather than reacting to your own interpretation of my comment as a personal dig at you.

                Second, Ethernel over Power sharing is only up to the first circuit breaker, whislt WiFi sharing is only limited by metal surfaces, walls and distance.

                This means that in some situations (for example appartments in appartment buildings) EoP “sharing” is entirelly dependent on what devices a person puts on the same electrical network (i.e. the power line branch sharing the same circuit breaker) whilst WiFi is a complete total hellhole of everybody screwing everybody else.

                Further, people sometimes rent the place they live in, not own it and getting permission to run wire along the walls might be impossible whilst investing in improving the landlord’s property by having wire run within the existing paths inside the wall (usually shared with power wire) is usually not exactly smart.

                So Ethernet Over Power is a possible solution that should be considered in light of the situation and used if appropriate or discarded if not.

                Looking at and evaluating the various solutions in light of the context is the Engineering approach to solving problems, so it makes sense to present a possible solution in a public forum when one’s intention is to help others.

                A self-centred “it’s not good in my situation hence it’s shit and anybody who says otherwise is insulting me” take does nothing to help others.

                • My original comment was about how slow Ethernet over power was and you claimed that only matters if your internet is faster. There are lots of situations where you’d run cable where that statement isn’t true. If you had said “sure it’s slower but it still works sometimes” that’s a wildly different statement than the equivalent of “speed only matters if it’s the bottleneck to the internet”

                  Power line adapters are usually fairly separated by different circuits, but that’s far from a hard limit. Just because there’s not a reliable connection between two circuits doesn’t mean the medium isn’t shared and interference can’t happen - it is very much like wifi through a cement wall or two.

                  In no way am I personally offended, I just used some sarcasm to show how inane that original statement is; and those kind of statements are everywhere in networking discussions.

          • @Wooly@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Yeah, it’s an old house and I’m not paying for gigabit internet because whenever I have I’ve literally never gotten the advertised speeds. I’m sure it’s good enough for 99% of people, I have the best internet of all my friends lol. But yeah, you won’t get the full gigabit speeds through copper wires if that’s what you can get from your router in other ways.

            Pretty sure nowhere apart from ugly new builds and student housing really gets modern internet speeds in the UK. I got one dude who’s still in the same city as me on like 10mb/s. My other friend just bought unlimited 4g because it’s better than their shit WiFi.

  • @TrontheTechie@infosec.pub
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    101 year ago

    I was staying with some friends and we were all Computer users and gamers, Ethernet cables sprawled across the floor to every room in the place, and when we got tired of tripping over it, we duct taped them down to the floor where they stayed until we moved out.

  • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    You could just use 2 Ethernet Over Power adaptors (not to be confused with power over ethernet).

    After all, it’s not as if the powerlines aren’t already installed at home and connect all power plugs with all other power plugs.

    This isn’t even new: I’ve been using this solution for about a decade, back when it could do a mere 20Mb/s (which was still way faster than my Internet connection could handle back then ;))

    Unless having a 500Mb/s limit on bandwith is somehow unacceptable when you could have Gigabit ethernet. Then again, why not fibre all the way ;)

    • @Entheogen@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      Have you ever paid attention to packet loss?

      Honest question, because I’m an electrician and Ethernet is so fickle, I’ve always assumed it would play hell on the overall quality.

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The whole thing is layered into multiple levels (go check the OSI Model and its Layers on Wikipedia if you’re willing to go down that specific information hole ;)) and the physical layer should mainly be handling packet loss on the connection between those adaptors, transparently to the higher layers that just see that as lower bandwidth than the spec for the adaptors (a spec which is really quite optimistic, IMHO).

        Yeah, a cable with a metal sheaf wired to the GND level (i.e. Cat cable) is going to be way better at higher frequencies and at isolation from noise that two twisted copper wires were the network signal is shared with a different “signal” which whilst generally 50/60Hz (depending on country) can have spikes and noise at other frequencies, so it’s never going to be the same.

        However for example at home right now I can get a reliable 100 Mbit/s over a pair of those adaptors from my router to my PC and the speed limitation is actually (I believe) from my old router not supporting Gigabit Ethernet rather than from the adaptors which are supposed to handle up to 500 Mbit/sec.

        That said and as somebody pointed out, it only works well if the plugs you’re connecting are on the same electrical network, as transversing coils isn’t exactly great for high frequency signals.

        • @ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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          31 year ago

          it only works well if the plugs you’re connecting are on the same electrical network, as transversing coils isn’t exactly great for high frequency signals.

          What does “electrical network” mean? Panel? Circuit?

          • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            If two plugs are connected to different circuit breakers, then they’re in different “electrical networks” in this sense: basically for a signal to go from one such plug to the other one it has to transverse both circuit breakers and that means going through coils.

            Coils are inductors, which are electrical elements which have have frequency dependent resistance (in simple terms), with the higher the frequency of a signal the more the resistance they offer to the passing of a signal, and the higher the bandwidth of your data connection the higher the frequency of the signal(s) necessary to transport that data.

              • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                I learned this stuff in a different language so don’t really know the right terminology in English.

                Also I’m from the Electronics side, so for me a “circuit” is something quite different ;)

                • @ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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                  11 year ago

                  Ah, in home electrical, a circuit generally means the same thing as electronics, but at 120V and around 15A (in North America).

      • @Fordry@lemmy.world
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        It definitely can be finicky. I had a portable ac that completely killed the power line ethernet connection when it ran. And my current house I have it in i use from where my router is to where my main TV is and it is unreliable even without that AC unit. So it definitely depends on the circumstances.

      • @vpklotar@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        I used ehternof power for many years and although I didn’t look at packet loss I never had a problem with it.

    • @BRabbit@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      My experience is that you need to be sure the outlets are on the same electrical network, otherwise it doesn’t work. When I did get it to work it seemed to be reliable.

  • @entropicshart@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    I had to run a Ethernet cable from the cable modem in the master bedroom to the office security gate and switch, which then connect to all the servers, desktops, and wifi routers.

    All thanks to shitty coax wiring in condos and Crapcast.

  • @Jtres@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    Do y"all not use the magic adapters that you plug in by your router, then by your PC to make a lan cable out of the electric wiring? That improved my cable management so much

    • @Pokethat@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Power over Ethernet adapters have some serious limitations. MoCa adaptors which use existing coaxial connections, even if you have cable internet, can provide greater speed and better latency than Poe. To be honest though, copper ethernet or fiber ethernet or generally the best way to go.

      Drill through the walls or be lazy and run a cable over the roof

    • @cley_faye@lemmy.world
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      41 year ago

      It’s all about compromises. Aside from a massive solar flare ravaging the earth or a small rabbit nibbling on the wires, there’s not much that will disturb the signal using an ethernet cable. Wifi is sensitive to other wifi and various home appliances, PLC can easily pick noises from a faulty device anywhere in your house (or your neighbor’s…) and have to reduce speed to maintain an acceptable signal/noise ratio, etc.

    • @Emark
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      41 year ago

      How are your upload/download speeds using those?

      • @Jtres@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Not as good as normal lan, but much better than wifi, and is easier to manage than a 50ft cord, so pros and cons

      • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Faster than your internet. Probably not a good option if you want to hook up a NAS, though.

    • @lauha
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      21 year ago

      Those are called Powerline adapters and they are so easy to use and secure. I use them so I don’t have to drag cables across the house