A little different verbs on my ending sound out...Wireless Routers...simple grill, can you give a hand?
BUT>>>
Does this mean I can, or can NOT use the router for DSL? It's broadband within the sense that it's fast, but it still uses a phone file, so is it out of the picture w/ a wireless router? (Single laptop use, no tandem computers here.)
Answer:
Your router would be ideal for DSL, newly plug your router into your DSL modem you will get from the phone company. Your phone company may tender you a modem that also is a wireless router so you would not even need to use your current one. check near the phone company (don't pay any extra though!)
DSL enable you to use the internet via your phone line. as long as your router is a DSL router (which will enjoy a phone line nouns on the back) then it should work. if it doesnt it is most expected a cable modem
In this context, DSL is broadband, not a phone line. Read your documentation roughly connecting to DSL. You'll probably have to capture a DSL modem from your phone company.
For DSL, you probably got (or would get) a modem that a phone strip plugs into, then a cable runs from the modem to your computer, it looks approaching an oversized phone line.
Instead of running the cable from the modem to your computer, you would run the cable from the modem to your router, after connect to the router using a wireless connection. So yes, you should be capable of use a router with most DSL setups.
A router does not connect to the DSL or to the broadband. Instead it go onto one side of a modem while the other side of the modem goes to the cable or DSL broadband nouns.
Since the router is independent of the outside world it can be used with DSL.
There used to be a modem call Webramp that worked with dialup and could also bring a router. But since most people who want a make friends have gone away from dialup that Webramp withered away and is singular found on eBay nowadays.
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