I am a retired programmer so I am fairly computer literate, but I am NOT NETWORK LITERATE. Here is what I have and what I want to do. My apology for the long post.
I have a cable modem from the local cable company that is connected via coax to the cable jack in the wall. From there, an ethernet cable runs to a nearby Belkin wireless router. From the router, another ethernet cable runs to my desktop computer. The wireless portion of the system provides an Internet connect to my laptop which I usually use at the other end of the house. I am told that connecting the desktop through the Belkin router gives me firewall protection.
As it stands, the laptop sometimes has problems getting to the Internet. It doesn't have this problem if I carry it to a location nearer the router. To solve this, I would like to move the wireless router to a spot that is much closer to where I use the notebook. This means running an ethernet cable from one end of the house to the other to provide the connection from the cable modem to the router. Another ethernet cable will also be needed to connect the router back to the desktop.
My question is ... can I run one cable that will handle two ethernet connections? If so, what cable type? I would like to run cable(s) that will provide for future speed upgrades if practical. I read about Cat-5 and Cat-6, but I am not sure what the differences are.
I have no need to run phone or any other signal over this cable, just two ethernet connections. I will do two separate cables if that is what I need. This cabling is going into an existing house so the less I have to run the easier it will be. Moving the cable modem might also be a possiblity, but I would prefer to keep it near the laptop.
By the way, I will have the cabling professionally installed, but the installers I talk to can't agree on what it would take to run the two ethernet cables. One says it can be run on one cable and the other says two cables.
Any help appreciated. Feel free to ask any questions if I am not clear on what I am trying to do.
Thanks,
Jack
I have a cable modem from the local cable company that is connected via coax to the cable jack in the wall. From there, an ethernet cable runs to a nearby Belkin wireless router. From the router, another ethernet cable runs to my desktop computer. The wireless portion of the system provides an Internet connect to my laptop which I usually use at the other end of the house. I am told that connecting the desktop through the Belkin router gives me firewall protection.
As it stands, the laptop sometimes has problems getting to the Internet. It doesn't have this problem if I carry it to a location nearer the router. To solve this, I would like to move the wireless router to a spot that is much closer to where I use the notebook. This means running an ethernet cable from one end of the house to the other to provide the connection from the cable modem to the router. Another ethernet cable will also be needed to connect the router back to the desktop.
My question is ... can I run one cable that will handle two ethernet connections? If so, what cable type? I would like to run cable(s) that will provide for future speed upgrades if practical. I read about Cat-5 and Cat-6, but I am not sure what the differences are.
I have no need to run phone or any other signal over this cable, just two ethernet connections. I will do two separate cables if that is what I need. This cabling is going into an existing house so the less I have to run the easier it will be. Moving the cable modem might also be a possiblity, but I would prefer to keep it near the laptop.
By the way, I will have the cabling professionally installed, but the installers I talk to can't agree on what it would take to run the two ethernet cables. One says it can be run on one cable and the other says two cables.
Any help appreciated. Feel free to ask any questions if I am not clear on what I am trying to do.
Thanks,
Jack