Increase Wireless Signal Strength To Excellent



I have a wireless BT Home Hub router to connect to the internet and signal strength has always been a problem showing between 2 and 3 bars out of a possible 5. The reason for this is quite simply the distance from the hub. The only practical place we can have the hub is on one side of the house whereas we use our laptops on the other. To bring the hub any closer would mean rewiring through the attic, an extra power point and a lot of aggravation. So we have plodded on with our poor to average speeds.

Then I noticed on Amazon a thing called a Huawei Wi-Fi Repeater WS320, which boasted a dramatic increase in your signal strength by simply plugging in the device closer to where your laptops, desktops or any other wireless devices are located. No wiring is required, just a spare three pin electric socket.

I read the reviews for this item and they were all pretty good so I bought one. Once arrived, the set-up wasn't that easy, as warned in several of the reviews but patience is rewarded. The simplest method described in the manual is to plug in the Wi-Fi Repeater into an electric socket close to your router and wait for the light on the front to turn from red to yellow. Once it is yellow press the WPS button on your Wi-Fi router (most modern routers have one) and then the button on the front of the Repeater. The Repeater yellow light then blinks and should turn solid green after 20 to 120 seconds. This means it is connected OK and you can then unplug the repeater and move it to a socket closer to your Wi-Fi devices. Your laptops etc., should then connect to the internet using the same details as before but the signal is now being boosted.

Unfortunately this method didn't work for me, even after discovering that a BT Home Hub router requires you to press and hold the WPS button for at least 20 seconds until all the front blue lights flash and then press the Repeater's button. I still got a solid yellow light instead of a green one. This means the connection failed, so I had to do it manually. Taking my laptop through I looked for the Repeater wireless signal and connected to it. Then I typed 192.168.2.254 in the address bar of Firefox. This connected me to the admin section of the Repeater and it started looking for my wireless internet connection. It came up with a list of ones close by and I chose my BT one. I then needed to just type in my password key and I was connected via the Repeater. The light on the Repeater turned green and all was well. I moved back to where I work and plugged the Repeater into a nearby 3 pin socket. It started up, the light on the front turned red, then yellow, flashing yellow then solid green. A reconnection to my BT Home Hub gave me 5 bars i.e. excellent signal strength as promised. Yippee! For the price of just over £25 and a little bit of aggravation it was and still is, well worth it.

How To Run 16 Bit Programs On Windows 7 Home Premium


Some of my older programs didn't want to run on Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit and believe me I tried all the compatibility running options in the properties section of the exe files. Then I noticed in searches that Windows 7 comes with an XP emulator to run those programs that don't like the new interface. So I tried to download the Windows PC Virtual Machine free from Microsoft only to find it is only available for Professional and Ultimate versions of Windows 7.

After a few choice expletives I decided to give the Virtual PC 2007 download (intended for Vista) a try. OK I had to ignore a couple of notices saying it wasn't meant for this version of Windows but after installation it worked quite well. The only thing I had to buy was a legal copy of Windows XP Professional Service Pack 2, which proved very easy to find for £10 on ebay. Considering the programs I wanted to work were no longer made and therefore there were no upgrades available and new alternative software was in the 3 figures bracket, this was a pretty good investment. Especially as I had a lot of old saved files which I regularly use and would not open in any other program.

There were however, a few niggly issues I had with the Microsoft emulator namely that there is no USB support, so file saving was a bind having to do it by creating a network between host and guest systems. Also a copy and paste option would be useful. These are available apparently in the new Virtual PC for Professional and Ultimate versions. Not much good to me though. I had further problems with the screen resolution. Mine being a laptop meant 768 pixel height was the optimum, meaning that with the virtual machine operating in a window, Microsoft XP had to be run in 800 x 600, which wasn't much good for one of my old graphic programs with toolbars etc., disappearing off the side and bottom. The full screen option in Virtual Machine wouldn't operate because it said the screen size wasn't big enough.

I then came across VMware Player which is basically the same thing but resolved my niggly issues. Copy and paste became a nice addition when running in Unity mode. This meant that the program actually ran on my Windows 7 desktop fully and I could copy and paste between programs easily. The screen size issue also disappeared as in both modes, selecting maximised window filled the screen. Furthermore, anything plugged into a USB port would be recognised by XP and installed accordingly, including cameras, printers and mass storage devices. VMware Player is also free for non commercial use and I can highly recommend it.

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