Short quick question.
If I download something via ethernet (Ps4) and my buddy who plays over wlan has laggs and says they would come because of my download.
I say the bandwidth that is used over LAN does not affect the Wi-Fi speed.
His argument (my lan connection comes through the same router)
100k glass fiber
Download draws on the download rate and if it is used completely by you via cable, then your playing buddy has laggs over the WLAN, clear case
Every child knows…
And WHERE do you live that you have a real fiber optic cable with you?!
BUT both go through the DSL line one takes the other bandwidth
from the internet connection.
I live in a small town near Hamburg…
But isn't that the download rate is split, so to speak? Once for ethernet and once for Wi-Fi…
WLAN is only influenced by the transmission / reception quality, the actual frequency on which the WLAN is running, the transport protocol and the corresponding encryption together with the hardware that uses it. If one of the factors weakens, the bandwidth adjusts accordingly. The limitation of the bandwidth over the Internet (router) is only regulated by who first had the connection. This can be changed manually by limiting the connections according to the bandwidth. Otherwise a LAN connection has no influence on a WLAN connection.
That already influences. On the other hand, something like that shouldn't happen with a 100k line.
It also depends on your contract how much will ultimately arrive at you. Just because you have a 100k line installed does not mean that 100k will necessarily arrive.
Neija… If it is a cable connection, it is still not fiber optic, because that is probably too expensive if I remember correctly
Split download rate for LAN and WLAN? Only if your router / hardware firewall supports it and really divides it, which is probably not the case
We had fiber optic laid, a year ago.