Internet access at home has become an important way to connect with friends, family, and favorite entertainment options. But for the uninitiated, needing Internet access at home can mean dealing with many new terms and concepts. Get the best unlimited wireless internet for your home and business.

Don’t worry, Suddenlink can explain it to you

Photo of a young Asian woman using her tablet with WiFi internet on a cozy evening at home in her warmly lit living room.

Is there a contrast between WiFi and the Internet?

WiFi is short for “wireless fidelity” and connects to the Internet via radio waves without using a physical cable to connect to any Internet device.

The Internet itself is the global network of servers, emails, websites, apps, social media, streaming services, video chat platforms, and other software tools through which people communicate.

So you can connect to the Internet via WiFi, but you don’t have to.

Is there such a thing as the Internet without WiFi?

Absolutely

In fact, all information on the Internet is transmitted over cables at some point. This can be fiber optic cables that send data to and from the physical servers (basically a fancy computer without a screen) where most of the information on the Internet is stored.

They can also coaxial cables that bring the data signals from the fiber optic cables into your home or Ethernet cables that attach computers, servers, and networks.

It is possible to connect to the Internet by using an Ethernet cable between a computer and a router/modem device for home Internet connections.

Why do people use WiFi?

Cellular data uses the satellite communication techniques used to connect cell phone calls. This information can convert to Internet data signals and vice versa, so you can check your email on a smartphone, for example, without being connected to the Internet via WiFi.

An “area of interest” additionally utilizes cell information. At the point when you utilize an “area of interest,” information signals are sent from your PC to your telephone. And from your telephone to the Internet and back using cell information. Areas of interest are not quite the same as WiFi in this regard, albeit the two terms are frequently misleadingly consolidated or exchanged.

National cellular networks offer slower connection speeds than the average home WiFi Internet. If you use many cellular data, you can sometimes be overcharged depending on whether your cellular plan includes unlimited data.

Want to sign up for an unlimited data plan for your mobile network?

In her brightly lit kitchen, a young woman was leaning on the counter early in the morning, drinking her coffee, and using her tablet via WiFi.

How would I set up WiFi in my home?

If you have Internet access at home, you may already have WiFi. Get your Internet service provider to notice if you have the right equipment.

If you don’t have Internet access at home but want to make sure you can connect to WiFi. You should mention this when you first contact an ISP. When you sign up, the provider will send a technician to your home with the necessary equipment. Usually, a combination WiFi router and modem device plug into the wall near the incoming Internet cable.

The expert will request that you name your home WiFi organization. And set up a secret word with you (which is energetically suggested for the sake of security).

You should recollect both your organization’s name and the secret key, which is case-touchy. Record them and keep them convenient.

Later your home WiFi network is associated and ready for action. You can interface with the Internet through WiFi with different gadgets all the while.

You should simply choose your home WiFi network from the rundown of nearby organizations in your gadget’s “Turn on WiFi” brief and afterward enter the secret word. However long the sign is sufficient, you can involve WiFi right away.

Why do people keep asking for the WiFi password?

Most WiFi networks are password protected for security reasons. After all, you don’t want every device in your home communicating with a stranger’s computer.

Some WiFi networks are secret phrase free.