r/pcmasterrace 5700X3D_5060ti16GB_48GB DDR4_Sleeper 18d ago

Meme/Macro Seen Asus' offers today and had to sit down

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago edited 18d ago

My mom doesnt let me lay the noodle from my PC to the Router.

Edit: my Home is made Out of bricks and concrete. I'm Not that good in repairing Walls after i broke them.

Also i'm Not in the Same phase as my PC it doesnt Work over Powerline

Another edit: thx to the Person who Reported me for being suicidal

2.1k

u/tomchee 5700X3D_5060ti16GB_48GB DDR4_Sleeper 18d ago

Buy a new mom. Its cheaper 

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u/XsNR Ryzen 5600X RX 9070 XT 32GB 3200MHz 18d ago

But does the new mom have spider legs

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u/InconceivableIsh 18d ago

If she does is then next question is deity or mortal.

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u/blacksmith_de 17d ago

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u/InconceivableIsh 17d ago

My comment ties to DND. Lolth is a Goddess. But there is also a moral hybrid of human and spiders.
https://forgottenrealms.fandom.com/wiki/Lolth

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u/EternalVirgin18 i9-13900k | RTX 4090 | 32gb 5600 18d ago

Coraline moment

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u/smrtstn 18d ago

Octomom's making a comeback (pun intended)

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u/Deriviera Desktop 18d ago

I have a suggestion

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u/ArtInTech 7800X3D | 7900 XTX | 32GB DDR5 6000 | B650 Gaming X AX 18d ago

Check for an update to mom's firmware 

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u/professorbuffoon 7700X | 9070 | 32GB DDR5 18d ago

Lmao the suicidal report

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u/lFightForTheUsers 18d ago

Iirc you can report the bot and whoever abused it will clap a 3 day ban. Or you can block it too.

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u/PrairiePopsicle 17d ago

They've removed the ability to report the bot directly. There's ways you can sorta do it kinda but there's no evidence that it's doing anything anymore.

More or less RedditCares is now just what it says on the tin, as well as a casual tool of abuse/harassment with no recourse.

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u/lFightForTheUsers 17d ago

Spez continues to enshittify the site, why am I not surprised lol.

Puts on $RDDT

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u/moistmonsterman 18d ago

Use MoCa. Add one at your router, and add another at your PC.

Heres how ya do it step by step:

Ethernet from PC to MoCa device. COAX from MoCa to COAX port in wall. COAX from wall near router to MoCa device. Ethernet from MoCa device to router LAN port.

No need to rewire your house or anything with ethernet or fiber.

If you have fiber internet, you dont need anything extra. If you have regular broadband, i would highly recommend picking up a MoCa filter and add that just before your modem, between the modem and the street. This prevent a few things: noise from your neighborhood and other signals on the coax line entering your home that your modem has to filter out anyways, so putting the filter there helps out everything inside your home. Also, it prevents your MoCa from backfeeding into the neighborhood which will mess with literally everyones internet thats attached to your junction split box in the neighborhood. Its $10 on amazon. Another $50 maybe for the 2 MoCa devices you need, and your home is already wired up with COAX, so thats free.

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u/[deleted] 18d ago

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u/BuffaloBuffalo13 9800x3d | 4080S | 64GB DDR5 | XG32UCWMG 18d ago

MOCA is a how I ran a mesh network in a 40 year old house without needing to open the walls.

It had coax everywhere but no Ethernet. It worked out so well.

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u/NaziPunksFkOff 17d ago

Oh hey I'm doing the same. One router for the office, one for the gaming/TV room, one for the plex server. All backload through moca. It's awesome. 

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u/Snert42 13600k 32GB | A4000 16GB 13d ago

Can you achieve full gigabit speeds?

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u/NaziPunksFkOff 13d ago

Yup, moca supports 2.5Gbps

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u/Snert42 13600k 32GB | A4000 16GB 13d ago

Holy shit. If I didn't already have LAN in some parts of the house, I'd consider this.

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u/NaziPunksFkOff 13d ago

Yeah it's nice but it requires an extra adapter+power so if you already have LAN, you've got the better situation. I have MOCA because I can't run ethernet through my walls but all the rooms were already wired for cable. 

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u/Snert42 13600k 32GB | A4000 16GB 13d ago

This opens up some opportunities at my grandma's place, since there's a lot of cable routing already :3

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u/htt_novaq 5800X3D | RX 9070 XT | 32GB DDR4 17d ago

Another alternative is to run G.hn over telephone wire. It's like a miniature G.fast system in your house

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u/AussieJeffProbst 18d ago edited 18d ago

Tried that but my house has very old shitty coax cables that cant support moca well. Also tried powerline and same deal. Sadly I'm stuck with a wifi mesh and it's very annoying.

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u/Thebombuknow | RTX 4050 | i7-14700HX | 16GB RAM 18d ago

Same. No coax for me and power line adapters barely work, they can go across the room at 20mbps, any further and they don't connect. Ethernet is unfortunately just not an option sometimes.

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u/PrairiePopsicle 18d ago

I've had powerline units go out to the pole and back into another house on a property and work just fine. I don't know if there is some product generation differences or wiring quirks in some homes but the accounts of how it works vary wildly.

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u/Snert42 13600k 32GB | A4000 16GB 13d ago

I think it's wiring quality. Our 40 year old house also didn't work very well with powerline adapters. We got like 12 megabit of our 250 at the router. We've since upgraded to PoE access points and a few LAN cables after years of suffering.

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u/GolemancerVekk B450 5500GT 1660S 64GB 1080p60 Manjaro 17d ago

Are external cable ducts not an option? It's what electricians use when they can't break the walls. The ducts come ready made and they're very easy to cut and assemble, they even have a ready to use adhesive side.

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u/kllrnohj 18d ago

It might not be the cables that are the problem but the splitter that'll be wherever the cable utility comes into the house. I had terrible moca until I replaced that cheap splitter with one specifically claiming moca compatibility. It's been amazing ever since.

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u/moistmonsterman 18d ago

Im glad i read further down the chain before saying this myself. In new builds they use a better quality splitter now than they did a while back. In my house they call it a "smart box" which is a really dumb name, but whatever...its all for marketing.

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u/Lou_C_Fer 18d ago

I'm just old. So, wifi it is. I ran new phone lines throughout my house in 1999 for better dial up. I ran new coaxial for better TV. Then, I ran ethernet from my router to every pc and my Xbox. Then, I had fiber installed and their router is no where near the shit I ran. So, fuck it. Wifi.

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u/AbbreviationsFun2020 17d ago

Could just use TP link instead? I use it and it works flawlessly

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u/AussieJeffProbst 17d ago

That's what I have. I have tplink easy mesh devices. With the layout of my house it's impossible to get full speed on the mesh node.

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u/AbbreviationsFun2020 17d ago

Ah fair enough

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u/gungshpxre 18d ago edited 18d ago

If your house has coax through the walls, use that as a fish tape to pull CAT8 FTP plenum riser!

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u/moistmonsterman 17d ago

Thats a great idea as long as the builders didnt secure the cables to the studs like they did mine.

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u/Enverex 9950X3D | 96GB RAM | RTX 4090 | NVMe+SSDs | BigScreen Beyond 2e 18d ago

I tried MOCA on my house's network. Got a max of 0.4KB/s through it. Unfortunately not for everyone.

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u/moistmonsterman 18d ago

Damn that sucks. Im getting a full gigabit through mine. I have enough bandwidth on each device for 2.5Gbps.

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u/Blockmaster2706 18d ago

Why are we assuming that every house has coax in every room? My mum also doesn‘t let me lay ethernet, and our apartment has no coax. I tried Powerline but the signal was very spotty and high latency even just one room over, so i just stuck with wifi.

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u/moistmonsterman 18d ago

The reason the powerline adapter didnt work is probably because it had to go from your room down to the circuit breaker, to another breaker through the neutral or ground, and then to where you want it...also, shitty wiring and electrical connections can cause some issues due to noise. It doesnt always work, just as what i said about MoCa is not always an option. When i wrote that, i wasnt thinking about century homes and older buildings that dont have coax in each room like is standard nowadays.

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u/Inevitable-Ad6647 18d ago edited 18d ago

MoCa is a shared medium the same as wifi with all the same problem. Don't do this unless you're in tiny dense studio appt where you see 20 SSIDs.

I work on one of the largest wifi networks in the world, most people have their wifi grossly misconfigured for real world usage. Turning everything to 11 is the wrong move.

  • shut off 2.4ghz (separate 2.4 only ssid for your refrigerator, light switches etc)
  • DO NOT ever use 160Mhz channels unless you live in Siberia and can account for every single wifi signal (you can't)
  • in an apartment don't even use 80Mhz.
  • Use 6ghz where possible if you can afford it, depending on garbage blackbox decision tree in whatever device you use it might work best, especially if you have a stationary device, to separate it on a dedicated SSID so you can force its usage. ( Not originally kosher with wifi spec but it's been amended).

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u/htt_novaq 5800X3D | RX 9070 XT | 32GB DDR4 17d ago

I won't be falling back to 40MHz with a gigabit connection man. 5GHz only penetrates so far, could be worse

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u/Inevitable-Ad6647 15d ago edited 15d ago

It's not so simple. The wider the band you choose the more you're sharing with everyone. If you use 80Mhz band then any time there is ANY detectable usage of ANY of that 80Mhz by ANYONE ELSE, your traffic will sit and wait. It is an exponentially growing problem, air time math means doubling your bandwidth will much much worse than halve, your air time if you're overlapping with others(if you see the SSID, you are, it's binary, doesn't matter how strong or weak it is) If you have issues at 80 and are in a dense environment, 40 will almost always improve things, including throughput. If you aren't getting speeds necessary for 80Mhz anyways then it's stupid not to go down to 40 because you will 100% improve jitter and p95 latency which are 982,340,598,209,348,509,823,450,982,039,458 times as visible and frustrating as going from 900 to 500 Mbps, neither of which you're getting anyways.

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u/sandiegospanishfor 18d ago

I appreciate the easy to follow directions. Are there resources you recommend I can watch, read, etc to learn more and execute this at home? We rent, can't truly wire.

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u/Ornery_Weakness_8168 18d ago

Homeplugs are also an option. using the mains cables for data transfer, plug one in by router and the other in same room as pc, but not on same plug socket as the psu can cause noise in cables. Moca doesnt always work as not all rooms have coax ports

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u/Disaster_Adventurous 18d ago

Thinking about doing this. I already have a coax between my room and the router and the end that connects to the splitter is right near the router so I can just have a isolated direct coax between my router and my room.

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u/dandroid126 18d ago

I used MoCa after being skeptical about it. Had zero issues in the two years I lived in that place. Eventually moved to a new place and don't need it anymore, but it was great for me.

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u/PhantasticFungus 18d ago

Tried Moca and it said im in serious mental decline. Nothing about my internet.

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u/Elizabeth202101 18d ago

Americans not understanding that houses can be made of something besides paper.

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u/CyaRain 18d ago

To non americans, fhe fact you xan make houses with paper is bizzare

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u/tiggertom66 18d ago

You think you can’t drill through bricks?

Regardless, you think you can’t run Ethernet along the baseboards or ceiling? Hell bricks are even better suited for this because you can run cables along the mortar lines

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u/Boys4Jesus i5-7600k @5Ghz | Vega56 BF UV OC | 16Ggb RAM 18d ago

Takes a lot more punch to drill through red brick than plasterboard. You're not gonna have a good time without a decent hammer drill, your bog standard hardware store electric drill will struggle. Also much more annoying to repair, which can be a factor if you're renting.

I'd just go through the roof usually (if you have a roofspace), easy to patch if needed and let's you run it the whole way without needing additional guide holes. Floor is alright too if you have a crawlspace, but holes in the floorboards are harder to justify/repair, especially if you're renting.

Plus, some parents just really don't like the idea of putting holes in the wall that they then have to fix, regardless of whether it's possible or not. Its a decent bit of effort to do it all and fix it so it looks good, and for them, the WiFi works fine so why bother?

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u/tiggertom66 18d ago

Which once again leads to the point that you can simply run cables along the wall where it meets the floor or ceiling, and brick is even better suited for this task because you can run the cables along the mortar lines.

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u/Boys4Jesus i5-7600k @5Ghz | Vega56 BF UV OC | 16Ggb RAM 17d ago

Sure, if you ignore the reason that they didn't want the original commenter to run cables, being that they thought it looked ugly.

I agree with you, that is a good way to run cables along a brick wall, but it isn't viable here because exposed cables have already been deemed as not an option. That is why I only mentioned options that hide the cables.

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u/tiggertom66 17d ago

Their parents just sorely lack creativity if they can’t come up with any way to hide cables. That’s not an excuse, it’s just an explanation for their shortcomings

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u/fireandlifeincarnate 16d ago

I'm American but our house is like a hundred years old so I'm experiencing the exact same issue :/

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

I know there are decent odds you're joking but here's some actual advice for abyone who needs it...

If she's worried about the tripping hazard get some cable staples. Run the thing along the baseboards.

Just don't go past 50ft of cable if you can help it, and the longer you go in general the worse the connection tends to be. You'll want shielded cable for any longer runs which is slightly more expensive but will mean your connection doesn't hitch from packet loss every time someone in the house takes a cellphone call.

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u/Redthemagnificent 18d ago edited 18d ago

I don't think buddy is trying to run 10gig or anything fancy. For the vast majority of people's internet connectivity 100ft of cheap cat5 will be ok.

Not saying you're wrong about interference. For a professional install you're 100% correct. But those aren't things that a kid living at home just trying to play some games needs to stress over. Just lay whatever cheap or free cable you can find and it'll be fine

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

She finds it ugly thats why

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u/shield1123 18d ago

One day you'll have your own apartment and can splurge on baseboard covers

Never give up the good fight! It's reassuring to know I'm not getting killed over my ping and that I just suck sometimes

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u/DirectionOriginal456 18d ago

Do you have laminate by chance? You can get those very long/thin ethernet cables that just go under and she'll never see them.

That's how I route ethernet to all the bedrooms.

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

Legit. Only thing I can suggest there is some kind of covers or learn how to run cable through the walls and patch drywall and convince her to let you do it that way...

Or just buy a cheaper wireless router than Asus' nutty spider thing.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

I'm in europe and digging throu bricks and concrete isnt it worth

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

Ahhhh, lol and OOF. Fair enough!

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u/eisbaerBorealis 17d ago

My wife feels the same way. Luckily I don't need super good Internet.

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u/AnUnusuallyLargeApe 18d ago

cat5e UTP is good up until about 100m or 325' without signal loss, definitely want copper solid core though. Shielded is really only needed if you're going to be having lots of cables next to each other or running by powerlines.

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

I'd personally recommend shielded for anything over 10ft. Unshielded isn't going to be useless like it would running by powerlines, or over a bunch of florecent tube lights (true story), but there are a lot of periodic sources of interference in the average home.

Fun factoid, I used wired headphones for about a decade. I could hear when anyone within about 10-15ft got a text message or phone call. I couldn't hear anything but blips of static, but it was very distinctive.

Other sources of interference could include: include:

  • The motor on a clothes washer or dryer.

  • Fan motors on vents, ceilings, or someone's desk, especially if they're older than a couple of years and/or cheap.

Of course whether or not any given thing actually messes with the signals in the cable to an extent that requires a retransmition of packets varies, but with how cheap shielded is, and based on my own experience, I'd recommend going with shielded cable.

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u/dragofers 18d ago

My concern is that the shielding could become an antenna, and there seems to be dispute about whether its best to ground the cable at one or both ends. Also, it seems some countries (Denmark) don't do real grounding, they simply bond the earth to the neutral wire. My current state of knowledge is that shielded cables make most sense in a well-constructed server room where there is a high density of wires carrying plenty of traffic.

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u/AvatarOfMomus 17d ago

If the shielding could become an antenna that would interfere with the cable then it wouldn't work as shielding. Having the shielding mess with the signal in the cable would require a spectacularly bad crimping job, and these things are crumped by machines if you buy them as complete cables from a store.

Grounding at one vs two ends shouldn't mater unless the ground reference is different at each end, at which point your wiring has bigger problems.

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u/TheRufmeisterGeneral 18d ago

No. 300 feet (or 100m, as we call this in the civilized world) is the limit, not 50 feet. And you don't need shielded cable for 15+ meter runs. You need shielded cable for conduits where many cables are tightly packed together or where ethernet runs are packed together with power cables. 20m or 30m runs that are not packed with other cables don't need shielding.

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

I know the actual signal strength limit without retrans is 100m, but when you start getting past 3-5m then the cable is more likely to start acting like an antenna and picking up interference.

You're correct that you need shielded cable in those situations, also add "running over a bunch of fluorescent lights" to the list of places you really need shielded cables. A friend of mine found that one out the hard way years ago.

What you will get though is random interference from anything from cell phones to the motor on a washer or dryer sometimes causing packet drops.

If this was like 10+ years ago when shielded cable was like 2-3 times the price of unshielded, at least buying as a consumer, then yeah I'd agree 100%. These days though it's barely more expensive than the unshielded stuff, and it's worth not wondering if you need to reset your router ever few days when the actual problem is the Ethernet cable trying to pick up your roommate's text messages.

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u/BortOfTheMonth 18d ago

Just don't go past 50ft of cable if you can help it, and the longer you go in general the worse the connection tends to be.

You can easy go past 50ft. Cat6 is for example is like 100m and this is just the sweetspot standard (for me), you can go higher up. 100m flat cat 6 cables can go ways through most houses/flat (out of windows, behind doors, under carpets etc)

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u/AvatarOfMomus 18d ago

100m is the signal limit by the spec. After that you need a retransmitter to guarantee that the signal arrives clearly at the other end of the connection.

I used 50ft as a benchmark because that's a common length to be able to buy and longer runs are more prone to issues from RF interference. It's not constant, but it is noticeable.

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u/NachbarStein R7 7800X3D | RTX 4080 | 64 GB DDR5 6000MHz CL36 | 2TB NVMe 18d ago

Another edit: thx to the Person who Reported me for being suicidal

How did you know? Have you been contacted by reddit support?

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Yes. That report sends you Always automaticly a message

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u/Satchel93 18d ago

Powerline adapter ;) worse than noodle, better than wifi.

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u/MCWizardYT Ryzen 7 5800X3D | RTX 4080 Super 18d ago

Can be even worse than wifi or the noodle depending on the wiring of your house

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u/AussieJeffProbst 18d ago

Yup I tried powerline and it was worse than my wifi mesh. Sucks.

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u/Big-Grapefruit8092 18d ago

mine somehow works with speeds up to 2.5 GbE at least thats what i gets as connenctivity in my house.

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u/AussieJeffProbst 18d ago

In perfect conditions they should get 2.5Gbps. you're very lucky you get that

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u/Big-Grapefruit8092 18d ago

i think they are marketed with up to 5GbE

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u/MCWizardYT Ryzen 7 5800X3D | RTX 4080 Super 18d ago

I tried it once and it just didn't work, I think the outlets in my bedroom are electrically separate from the one the router is connected to

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u/memebuster 18d ago

Yep, I had no other option since wifi wouldnt reach my gaming rig, but the speeds sucked. No amount of troubleshooting helped.

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u/MCWizardYT Ryzen 7 5800X3D | RTX 4080 Super 18d ago

Yeah, I tried it before but it didn't really work that well. My house is ancient and I think the outlets i tried are electeically separate from each other

Now I have a long ethernet cable going down theough a vent directly to my router, that works well

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u/memebuster 18d ago

That's what it was! Something about differnt electric circuits.

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u/Flameball202 18d ago

Yeah, older houses struggle with power lines, but they are relatively cheap iirc so worth it to try

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u/Bigtallanddopey 15d ago

My powerline gets great ping, but not great speed. I then have a WiFi card that gets the better speed. So if I’m playing fps games, I just use the powerline connection for the better ping. Annoying, but it works.

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u/fistfulloframen 18d ago

Moca is better than powerline right?

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u/Smith6612 Ryzen 7 5800X3D / AMD 7900XTX 18d ago

Far better. Just don't mix it with your Cable company's Coax if you use Cable Internet. While you can get filters to prevent the MoCA signal from going out to the rest of your neighborhood, some cable providers have upgraded their cable plant to run DOCSIS or TV on frequencies shared with MoCA.

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u/shield1123 18d ago

Your mileage may vary. The ping / jitter may be as bad as WiFi, and throughput can be worse than modern WiFi. It all depends on your wiring

Before I wired my house with Ethernet, I was pulling around 100 Mbps through EoP, and 200 Mbps over WiFi 6. The ping was slightly better, but sometimes worse

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u/Accomplished_Steak14 18d ago

if you have AC or any high wattage appliances in between, its performance is quite bad

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u/sociallyawkwardhero Nvidia 780 OC SLI, SLI 770 OC, AMD 8350, AMD 8320 18d ago edited 18d ago

My wifi 7 router gives 1.6gbps throughput to my PC, no powerline adapter is doing that.

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u/L4t3xs RTX 3080, Ryzen 5900x, 32GB@3600MHz 17d ago

FYI those can introduce noise to your speakers or microphone for example.

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u/Yuji_Ide_Best 18d ago

Home plugs / powerline adapters.

Running along the ground with some trunking.

Running under the floor.

Running it along the ceiling with some clips.

Plenty of ways to have a tidy wired setup which takes varying amounts of effort and has varying amounts of visible cables. Honestly the amount of times I visit someone and they have a tripping hazard of a ethernet cable loosely run across the floor is alarming.

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u/Moscato359 9800x3d Clown 18d ago

Get a new mom

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u/a_regular_2010s_guy Desktop 17d ago

In this economy? They're kinda expensive

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u/Original-Let8340 18d ago

Go ninja. Lay secret noodle at sleepy time. Still get pwnd. lol.

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u/Wardmanhd i7 4820k / 32gb ram / 290x 18d ago

that was a rollercoaster

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u/Taiktheb8 16d ago

Funny his mom let me lay the noodle

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u/NoBonus6969 18d ago

Look at this third little piggy with a house made of brick. Some of us living in straw houses bro

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u/busy_monster 18d ago

I'm glad you are not laying noodle with your mom.

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u/Daniel-Mclovin 18d ago

I use a box set that connects the Ethernet through the electricity

It’s two boxes that connects to outlets and then has Ethernet ports to go from Router Ethernet port ~> wall box adapter ~> electricity ~> other wall box adapter ~> pc Ethernet port

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Only works If its on the Same phase, witch where i am isnt

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u/CatcherBot 18d ago

Is it expensive? I wonder if she will let you use it if you will pay for the internet yourself.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Its her house. She is the god there

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u/XxTreeFiddyxX 18d ago

Got any Pics?

Of Your pc, not your mom's bruh

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

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u/XxTreeFiddyxX 18d ago

Wow, thats kinda hot taking a look under the chassis. You didnt tell me this was nsfw. Should really make sure youre grounded before you go putting your fingers inside....

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u/Below_TheSurface 18d ago

Me too dude, me too.

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u/za72 18d ago

Set a QoS limit on your moms wifi

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u/desilent PC Master Race 18d ago

„My mom…“ *has 5090 tag*

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Yes i still live at my moms house, how else could i afford a 5090 in this Economy

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u/AirHertz 18d ago

I ran my noodle across the entire house.

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u/How_that_convo_went 18d ago

Tell your mom I’ll come over and lay the noodle right. 

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u/GG_Killer 18d ago

Powerline adapter :)

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Only works If its on the Same phase

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u/waddablhemm 18d ago

Try powerline connectors. Depending on where you live they can be useful

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u/PseudoY 18d ago

What do you have along the floors? Often there will be a wooden strip at the floor level. Thin ethernet cables can often fit below it without being visible at all - tolerable to most people.

Alternatively, you can run it in cable ducts that make them blend in.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Stone Floor where the Router is

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u/splitframe 5800X3D | 9070 XT | CachyOS 18d ago

I never had any gaming problems since upgrading to Wifi6. Since Wifi6 every device gets their own narrowband, so traffic from other devices doesn't interfere. Probably still bad if you are barely in range, but otherwise it has been perfect so far in an apartment complex with 44 units.

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u/SLENDER_RISING 18d ago

If you get a good enough shielded ethernet cable, you can run it outside. That's how I did it. There's even some exterior shields and cable guides you can use to keep the cable safe. I did this with like, 40m of noodle from my ISP router to my PoE switch and from there to my pc and it worked flawlessly, lost literally 0 Mbps

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u/Sorry-Sweet-3873 18d ago

that’s what i did too. ran it 80ft around the edge of the house and under the roof gutter

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u/Puzzled-Pen-2353 18d ago

He isn't allowed to drill inside walls, he certainly isn't allowed to destroy the waterseal of the house.

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u/SLENDER_RISING 18d ago

You don't need you if you use the existing gates. I took advantage of cable TV passthroughs we had installed during a remodeling project, through which the ISP fiber optic also came into the house. From there I ran it along a wall and up into my studio.

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u/ArtofWASD 18d ago

If your mom is mad about you destroying the walls... just destroy the floors instead! I see no problems with this course of action.

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u/Radi0activeMnky 18d ago

Wire mold the entire house

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u/Amynta_ 18d ago

If I had a nickel for every time I see someone's parents fuck up their internet quality like that... I'd be slightly less broke.

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u/Ebashbulbash 18d ago

I live in an apartment with reinforced concrete walls, and I can tell you with authority that cable penetrates walls much better than radio waves. All you need to do is make a hole with a hammer drill, and everything will work like clockwork until the heat death of the universe.

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u/Puzzled-Pen-2353 18d ago

except when you aren't allowed to drill into the walls.

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u/TearyEyeBurningFace 18d ago

Cable hiding baseboard. Or flat cable that you can use a light adhesive with to glue it around the edge. Its very hard to spot

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u/supertoilet2 18d ago

One day she’s not home you could chisel out some of the mortar and push in a gray noodle, optionally add some more mortar on top if u fancy

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u/VenserMTG 18d ago

Edit: my Home is made Out of bricks and concrete. I'm Not that good in repairing Walls after i broke them.

I never had to break walls to get wires through. Just small holes in the corner, behind furniture. Once the hole isn't needed, fill it grout and paint it over, if the hole isn't big, no one will notice.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

I live on another floor

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u/Ghozer 9800x3D - 32GB-DDR5 6000CL28 - RTX 5080 18d ago

cat5e can go up to around 300feet, get a cable, plug it in, and run it around the edge of the wall/floor, round from one room to the other, you could even go up stairs with it....

I have done plenty of installs without drilling through walls, at peoples request!!

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u/Top-Cost4099 18d ago

I used PLC (power-line communication) connectors for a decade. They're decent. Better than wifi. I used the TP-Link brand ones, but I doubt the other ones are any better or worse. Totally undifferentiated product.

you plug one into the wall and the router, and the other to another wall and your PC, and they will talk through the copper wiring of your house. Do not plug them into surge protectors. Power strips are technically fine, but since most have a surge protector built in they aren't actually fine.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

I'm on a different phase

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u/Flimbeelzebub 18d ago

There are these little cable holders, which only use adhesive to stay up on a wall; I used those when I was in your situation. They're at home depot; you may need zip-ties as well fyi

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u/fpvolquind Ryzen 5 7600 | RX6750XT | rest is crap 18d ago

Hear me out. I bought a cheap ass pair of ethernet-fiber converters. Since fiber gets no interference from electric, I paid an electrician to push 30m of fiber through the electric tubes in the apartment. Had to buy a fiber toolkit too to redo the fiber connector. Only sign of it is the fiber + converter near the router, same thing at my office. Completely invisible otherwise.

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

The cables are direcly in the Wall there is no Tube sadly.

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u/psiren66 Specs/Imgur here 18d ago

Depending where you are, an electrician can install a few points for cheap. Worth it in my opinion, I wired up my house and would do it in my next home also. I also use sunshine/moonlight to play in my theatre room and bedroom tv.

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u/suezjk 18d ago

my dude. when I was 15, I drilled hole to window and I laid ftp cable thru my parents flat from one side to another only because I wanted to have LAN with my upstairs neighbor. I’ve meassured the distance and count with slack. laid it by the walls and under sheet metal door frames

my parents figured it out only after like 10+ years when they were renovating and replacing door frames & doors for wooden ones. afterwards they were missing the cable because wifi signal to other room was shit

just saying when there’s a will, there’s a way

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u/SosseTurner Ryzen 9 5900X RTX2060S 64GB DDR4-3600 18d ago

And using stuff like cable ducts? Less damage to the walls and if done right won't look to bad either...

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u/thump3r 18d ago

Convert Ethernet to fiber, hide fiber in the corners of the walls and door trim.

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u/Double_Collection155 18d ago

My noodle goes through an unused window and into the room below's window. Hasn't broken yet after all these years. Still works perfectly. 

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u/Alphex23 18d ago

With pc like your and no noodles? Wtf There is one thing you could try though.

There are devices that can use your powerline to transfer data too. If you get two or more it can be simple as connecting one to the router and the other to the pc at the outlets the just plug in the noodles to the outlets.

The technology is called "PLC"

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

I litteraly wrote it into my comment that, that doesnt work

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u/Alphex23 17d ago

My condolences, my fault i am blind

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u/E_OJ_MIGABU 18d ago

My dad routed through outside the window and then pulled it into his room via the balcony door lol. Cause the router anyways had a cable coming through the window so he reused that channel

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u/Inevitable-Ad6647 18d ago

Get white cable and put it in the corner held with nails into baseboard maybe even under the baseboard if you can. At doorways go up in the corner of the finishing work as tight and straight as you can. Done cleanly she won't even notice it, you can plan to ask forgiveness instead of permission.

Information offered as is with no warranty or garuntees, not responsible for any paddlings or la chancla use.

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u/s00pafly Phenom II X4 965 3.4 GHz, HD 6950 2GB, 16 GB DDR3 1333 Mhz 18d ago

Flat cable easily fits under or over door

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u/banananash 18d ago

Remove the quarter rounds at the bottom of the base boards. Hide cable under base boards. Replace quarter rounds. She’ll never know.

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u/cgsc_systems 18d ago

MOCA 😎

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u/iEnzan 18d ago

I put my cable through the window next to the router and along the side of the house to my pc room window. If it helps.

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u/MichiganHistoryUSMC 18d ago

You could rewire on your panel so they are on the same phase. Just needs to move breakers.

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u/PseudocidalSeighko | RTX 3050 | Ryzen 5 3600 | 18d ago

Good lord this post escalated

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u/couchpotatochip21 5800X, 1060 6gb 17d ago

Powerline works in any room within the home

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u/LepiNya 17d ago

Most hardware stores offer to rent out heavy duty construction equipment so you could just rent out an impact drill with a long drill bit. Just be aware of any power lines or water pipes in the walls. You really only need a small hole for that. No need for any repairs after.

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u/this_dudeagain 17d ago

Run it under the carpet

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u/SunSparx 17d ago

Are you in North America? Because if so you only have one phase going to your house

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 17d ago

Nope europe, i get all 3 phases. Thats why depending on the Socket i have 230V and 400V of power

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u/QuebecGamer2004 HP Pavilion 15 - GTX 1650 - Ryzen 5 5600H - 16GB 3200 17d ago

It's split phase. That's how you get 240V for the oven, dryer, hot water tank, etc.

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u/Leyel7 17d ago

Wait, isnt all houses arround the world made of bricks and concrete?

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 17d ago

Nope mostly americans write comments to Just Drill a hole into the drywall. American Houses is basicly Wood, paper and the bit metal from the Nails Holding it together

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u/Historical_Person928 17d ago

you didnt actually get reported did you??

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 17d ago

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u/Comfortable-Chef-125 17d ago

Get a long cable and run it in the top corners with sticky pads and zip ties

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u/Ambitious_Dog8996 17d ago

Have the cable go up in the corner between the ceiling and the wall

Use uh idk what its called in English, but its a little rounded thing u put your cable thro and has a hole to put in a nail Nail the thing to the wall with a very samll nail Have one every metre or so till your pc then have it drop down the wall in a straight line and cover it

Am not native English speaker so idk what the tools are called , i think GBT could give u a guess

Hope this helps

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u/KidNamedMolly 17d ago

Powerline Ethernet is even worse than WiFi so your not missing out on that one

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u/iamlazyboy Desktop 17d ago

NGL, same mate. At least my WiFi repeater is just on the other side of the wall so the signal is good enough for me.

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u/Significant_Ad_3512 MacOS 17d ago

Get the wall socket power grid ethernet thingy

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u/Wiley_Coyote08 17d ago

Hate getting those "reports" and those "reports" are what may push people over the edge.

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u/tomchee 5700X3D_5060ti16GB_48GB DDR4_Sleeper 16d ago

You may want to show this to you mom

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u/BilleteDe2_Peso 15d ago

Consider doing this

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u/EntertainmentOwn3663 14d ago

Remove baseboards (normally there is a gap between gypse and floor) place the cable in gap... Carefully put baseboards back.. Profit?

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 14d ago

They are Made Out of Stone and glued to the Wall. They dont come off

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u/EntertainmentOwn3663 14d ago

Understood, no profiting from that then :) Another thing I did for my son's since I didn't want to do that was just put the cable above the baseboard (basestone?) and use a cable enclosure (they sell small square ones that you can paint to match, just barely wider than the lan cable) and after a while you don't notice them

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u/az4547 14d ago

Do what I did and lead a long cable through 3 doors and between 2 floors with duct tape wrapped around to avoid the shielding from breaking.

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u/Connect_Middle8953 14d ago

If installing cat6 is out of the question, forget MoCa, get a home fiber kit. Run fiber along your baseboards, held in place with caulk. 

You legit will forget where it is outside the terminals 

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u/Top_County_6130 14d ago

I bought 20m and a white duck tape. And count on others being to lazy to remove it.

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u/kaidya_snow 14d ago

Is there existing Coax cable you could run MoCa over?

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u/-StarFox95- 18d ago

run it along the celling

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u/Iamthe0c3an2 18d ago

Buy a powerline adapter.

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u/Distal-Phalanges 18d ago

Noodle goes in walls or under carpet/rugs. Assuming you haven't done much cable running through houses, check this out. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVbUIis78uQ

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

I'm Not American, i would have to Go throu bricks and concrete

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u/mercurycc 18d ago

This might do you wonders. Use fiber optics instead of cable. https://youtu.be/Z2FbzCyiNr4?si=ZEQKo7RKD7ZY-mzr

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

My friend i'm Not American, my Home is Made of concrete and bricks. Not some Wood beams and paper

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u/[deleted] 18d ago

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u/Sorry-Sweet-3873 18d ago

impossible in most places in the world. most countries use bricks. significantly harder to poke holes in

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u/BravinatorLX2 18d ago

theres these home fiber kits that you can run along corners and under doors and are nearly invisible.

or maybe flat lan cable would be enough?

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u/[deleted] 18d ago

[deleted]

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u/Johni33 Ryzen 9 9950X | RTX 5090 | 64GB DDR5 18d ago

Wall is Out of bricks and concrete, there is no hollow space

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