Hi James,
fine questions.
First, there is no other tenet here, its a private home, my apartment is
in the basement, and honestly? I saw more than a few rental unites that
advertised as all inclusive, i. e. providing internet as a part of the
rent just like some provide utilities.
Speaking personally, I wonder how rogers enforced that rule?
willing to share the models of those units so I can search for them?
On Thu, 13 Apr 2023, James Knott via talk wrote:
> On 2023-04-13 18:13, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
>> Hi wise souls,
>> I hope I ask this question clearly, as it may be hard to picture.
>> My new landlord is including Internet in my rent, all the more motivation
>> to find a solution.
>> he has bell, fibe for home, which includes things like Internet, but is
>> not very aware of unique methods of using the Internet, like Ethernet
>> connections.
>> for the past year I have quite easily used fibe connections with my main
>> machine, so I feel sure this may be more about distance than anything
>> else.
>> There is no physical modem in my apartment. Instead, I have a set of two
>> adapter I got from the source a few years back.
>> they plug into the wall, have a single Ethernet jack, and when the other
>> item is connected to the modem via the same method, I can use the
>> network, no extra software involved.
>> The problem we are having though is that for unexplained reasons I loose
>> internet access, sometimes for minutes, sometimes for several hours at a
>> time.
>> My first thought was that perhaps the service upstairs thinks i am a
>> threat, but again my new landlord has no idea how to check for this.
>> To be forthright the Internet shakiness is becoming a major factor for me
>> personally, I still have no land line, doing a great deal of work with
>> resources on line, like reach my office email.
>> Leading me to the question.
>> given adapter like the one I am using now existed, think 2017 or 2018, I
>> am guessing comparative ones exist that allow the Ethernet connection to
>> tap into a wireless network.
>> By which I mean, there will be no need for the adapter to be physically
>> connected to the service modem, the adapter can draw upon the wireless
>> resources, while still providing say a single Ethernet jack.
>> Anyone know of such an adapter?
>> amazon Canada would be wonderful as I have a gift card balance just now.
>> If confusing, ask questions that make it easier to follow, my main
>> computer uses Ethernet only, I have no wireless resources whatsoever.
>> Thanks,
>> Karen
> Yes, it is possible to do that with WiFi. I have a couple of portable
> routers that will do that. However, another issue is by sharing Internet
> service, your landlord might be violating his terms of service with his
> ISP. For example, here's something that's prohibited on Rogers. I expect
> Bell will have something similar.
>
> "use the Services for anything other than your own personal
> purposes (such as reselling the Services, providing Internet
> access or any other feature of the Services to any third party) or
> share or transfer your Services without our express consent"
>
> So, if your landlord has personal service for his home and shares it with
> tenants, he would be violating this.
>
> Also, what privacy protection would you have, to keep him or the other tenant
> off your network? Typically, you'd use a router.
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