Why Is Hotel Wi-Fi So Slow?

Why Is Hotel Wi-Fi So Slow?

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Why Is Hotel Wi-Fi So Slow?”.
So if you’ve ever stayed in a nice hotel, you know that it can be a real treat, plush bedding, those fancy, little soaps in the bathroom and the seven dollar sodas in the minibar. Well, anyway, all those things can go a long way towards making you feel like a real VIP. Until that is you connect to the guest Wi-Fi and it’s so slow that it makes your fancy laptop if you like something right out of 1995, but why is hotel Wi-Fi, often barely functional, even at high-end resorts? Let’S start with the obvious volume, unlike at home, where you might only have a few people connected to your network at once, hotels have to handle hundreds or even thousands of connected devices, but come on John. It’S not like these hotels, don’t plan to fill all the rooms with guests, so surely they can account for this right. Well, you’re right. They could, but part of the problem is: do see business model of hotels which try to draw people in with visually appealing rooms. Common areas – hot tubs, continental breakfasts, you name it. This means. If optimized network infrastructure doesn’t look flashy in the brochure, it can often get pushed to the bottom other list of priorities so because of this, their sense can end up seriously flawed in a number of ways. For starters, when’s, the last time you saw any routers or access points just hanging around the resort, hotels off the cram, their equipment into closets maintenance areas and even ceilings. So things don’t look too messy, but trying to hide it behind a bunch of obstacles can reduce signal, strength and therefore range and speed, and many hotels also use older equipment that there are in no hurry to replace. For example, hotels often signed contracts with outside companies to provide equipment and services for a certain length of time, sometimes years. So if the hotel has a bunch of routers and access points deployed that only support older standards, replacing them to be very costly depending on what the contract says and it isn’t like new equipment is cheap to begin with. And if your hotel is using older equipment chances, are it’s only offering a connection of the congested 2.4 gigahertz band, which is compatible with almost all Wi-Fi devices? But it’s more successful to interfere us there’s. A new were five gigahertz bands when lots of devices are in close proximity, which would happen in the hotel. The hotel’s network might also be using 802 point 11 and routers that don’t have as much throughput as newer standards like wireless AC.

So when you combine all this with the fact that the hotel’s high-speed internet connection is being split across hundreds or even thousands of guests, it can result in serious bottlenecks but hold on a minute. Wouldn’T it make more sense for the hotels to just spend money on better hardware and attract visitors with fast Wi-Fi? Well, some hotels are indeed doing this, but many others are still for some reason. Holding on to the idea that shoddy Wi-Fi will get customers to give up watching movies and other stuff on their laptops or tablets and instead of spring for hotel provided pay-per-view. And although it’s pretty easy to see that hotels will probably have to give up on this. At some point, what can you do with the meantime if you’re stuck in a place with slow, Wi-Fi? Well a good investment to make if you’re a frequent traveler is a small wireless router that you can take with you? You see many hotel rooms also offered wired internet access, often over that Ethernet port, that you find hiding next to the lamp plug a router into it in AP mode and bam.

You have your very own Wi-Fi network and, since you likely won’t need a signal outside of your room and inexpensive short range solution will probably do especially if you use the less crowded five gigahertz band that we were talking about before and if you’re really pressed for Space and your tiny travel bag, there are even travel sized routers that are a little more than just a single Ethernet port plus an antenna. Another option is to simply avoid staying at hotels with poor Wi-Fi in the first place. There are websites that pop those specifically the crowdsource estimated speeds of hotels in many different cities. So, if you’re going to need a reliable internet connection on your next trip, keep these listings in mind just make sure you also look at the rest of the reviews.

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