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I Need A Wireless Router To Take In A Semi Truck.

I need a wireless router to take in a semi truck.?

My brother is a 48 state truck driver and is always wanting me to go with him for a month long road trip. I need to find a internet router that I can take with me whether it plugs into the USB port or not. I can't remember the ones from the commercials, and I need to but one b4 June or July. Please help me. I would love to buy one from Amazon.com. And remember for those of u that don't know. Semi trucks do NOT have the phone jacks to plug it into. It has a regular power outlet.

What do long-haul truckers eat?

When I was driving I had a little “lunchbox” oven, that I plug into the lighter and looks like those lunchboxes from the 1930s. I had a mini fridge/freezer to store my food. I was solo so i could set things up as I wanted. I still lived at home with my folks and I love to cook,So when I went home I would cook meals, liver and onions w. rice and peas, fried fish, made spaghetti, casseroles etc. and stored them in those foil tins for pound cake from the dollar store and froze them - since those pans fit my lunch box oven perfectly. I kept green tea, yogurt, milk, cereal, OJ, grapes, sandwich bread, lunch meat, cheese in the fridge. I ate at a truck stop once in a while if they had my faves that I didn’t cook, such as turkey wings, and the TA had a restaurant that had a lovely steak burger with a thick breaded slice of provolone cheese. But a typical meal day went like this:Breakfast: Yogurt, cereal, a few grapes, water. Put frozen meal pan in lunchbox oven, or make sandwiches if I didn't do it before bed.Lunch: Whatever was in the pan, green tea or a soda if I had a taste for one, or sandwiches, grapes, chips or cheezits. Put frozen meal in lunchbox oven if I didn't have one for lunch.Dinner: A frozen meal if I didn't have one for lunch, beverage, yogurt or cereal for dessert. Or truck stop restaurant if it was one I stop at frequently. Prep next day's sandwich if I want one.I was a 22 yr old, 225 lb in great health, considered “thick” because of my height so I didn't have a big belly and kept my weight down and in the same range give or take a few lbs from my “monthly” visit. I figured I'm going to be sitting for most of the day, so I need to eat better, I also walked the rest areas, company terminals when I parked there for my 36 hr restarts to get some exercise in. I actually gained weight when I came off the road lol; I need to get back on my “trucking diet” again. My point is, take a little time to prep and you can still have healthful meals on the road - no excuse to eat junk all the time just because you're on the run.

What are the differences between the wireless router speeds AC 1900, AC 2400, and AC 3200?

Building off some other answers I'd like to give a simpler but more complete answer in terms of how they come up with these numbers:These marketing terms are adding the max speed of each radio. They may support 300Mbps or even "1000MBps" on 2.4Ghz, and as high as 2166 per 5Ghz radio.AC1900 = 600 on 2.4GHz, 1300 on 5Ghz (rather ridiculous claim, as very few devices can achieve above 300Mbps on 802.11n, see note at end)AC2400 = 600 on 2.4GHz, 1733 on 5Ghz. They round up.AC 3200/5300 triband routers use a dedicated 5GHz radio only for 802.11ac, a 5Ghz radio for a/n/ac, and a 2.4Ghz radio for b/g/n. Add up the max theoretical speed of 802.11n, 600Mbps +1300Mbps on each 5Ghz radio for 802.11ac for AC3200. AC5300 is 1000Mbps 802.11n on the 2.4Ghz radio, and 2166Mbps on each 5Ghz radio. (Again, the 1000mbps claim for n is absurd)When looking for performance in a wireless AC router, look for the number of spatial streams it can support - typically spoken of in terms like "2x2 MIMO, 3x3 MU-MIMO, etc." The best you will likely see is 4x4 MU-MIMO. Keep in mind the client devices must also support this, and the geometry of antennae means you're not going to see beyond 2x2 wireless AC in a phone.Key takeaway is that "AC3200" marketing does not mean that a typical single device can achieve this speed. A single device could only achieve this speed if it also used three radios and used some form of load balancing.Note on 300Mbps+ 802.11n: These schemes use very high modulation schemes and 3x3 or 4x4 MIMO which are optional extensions to the 802.11n standard (read: almost no clients will support them). Most devices can only achieve 150Mbps per stream and support 1 or 2 streams. You cannot fit more than 2 2.4Ghz antennae in a phone to my knowledge due to the geometry of the antennae (must be a certain size and space apart, related to the wavelength of 2.4GHz signal) All this equipment is essentially nonsensical, and users seeking higher speeds should look to 802.11ac instead.

What do I need to do in order to use my residential IP as a proxy (because it's high quality vs the ones you can purchase) when travelling?

I do that all the time, it has the added benefits of being more secure and make you appear as if you were browsing from home, it also allows you to bypass the Chinese firewall.I am not going to go into too much details since you will find tutorials online easily but here are the steps:You will need an ssh server. The cheapest options are either a Raspberry Pi or to rent a VPS server. A VPS will make your life slightly easier. I would recommend to deactivate login via password and rely on private keys if you feel like hardening your security a bit more, changing the default port is a good idea as well.If you decided to host your SSH server at home, you will need to give it a static IP address and do some port forwarding on the router to make that SSH server accessible from outside.Once this is done, install a decent SSH client on your device (Putty or BitVise come to mind for Windows), set up the SSH tunnel and then configure your browser to use the local port as a proxy.The last part of this article gives a bit more information:How to Use SSH Tunneling to Access Restricted Servers and Browse Securely

Can I use an Amazon Fire Stick with a TV which is not a smart TV?

Amazon fire tv stick only require HDMI port and power socket to power the device. It makes your non smart tv smart. It works on Android operating system.

Why does my new laptop have a cancer warning label?

Thanks for the A2A!"WARNING: This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm."There was a law passed in California a while back called Proposition 65 that requires these stickers be placed on any product that is grown- due to a chance that it could pick up a minute amount of lead.Businesses are required to provide a "clear and reasonable" warning before knowingly and intentionally exposing anyone to a listed chemical. This warning can be given by a variety of means, such as by labeling a consumer product, posting signs at the workplace, distributing notices at a rental housing complex, or publishing notices in a newspaper. Once a chemical is listed, businesses have 12 months to comply with warning requirements.These products are considered safe by the federal government of the US (and the rest of the world).Can using this product cause cancer? Lead is a probable carcinogen, meaning it can probably cause cancer in some situations. But there is no way to assess the risk or even level of exposure for any one person handling electrical cords or cables.The amount of lead a person might absorb will depend on what the person does with the cord and how long they handle it. People are exposed to lead mainly by swallowing or breathing powdered lead. The lead found in cords is not powdered, so users are not at risk of inhaling it.Wrapping up, you are completely safe while using this laptop! Every electronic product contains some amount of lead in it. There is no significant risk you are going under or an observable effect you are going to see when using your laptop.That being said, this label is always going to be used by big businesses of California to avoid costly litigation and being sued by regulators!Enjoy you new HP Spectre! Heard, the screen on it was pretty good!

Does the 5GHz Wi-Fi signal interfere with the Zigbee signal?

Wi-Fi and Zigbee do interfere with each other within the 2.4 GHz band. 5 GHz Wi-Fi has little impact on the performance of the Zigbee network and vice versa. A good analogy to why there is little interference would be to consider whether Wi-Fi and LTE interfere with each other in your cellphone. These signals occupy very different portions of the spectrum, so there is little interference in this regard.However, for 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi, and Zigbee there is quite a large amount of interference. 802.11 b/g/n is allows for up to 14 overlapping channels as follows:Because of this overlapping nature of the Wi-Fi channels, there will always be interference with a Zigbee network (or for that matter, a Bluetooth network) that is spatially co-located. The impact of the Wi-Fi network on the Zigbee network performance depends strongly on the type of interference. There are three models to consider:Co-channel interference (Zigbee and Wi-Fi are directly overlapping, as in the case of Wi-Fi channel 2, and Zigbee channel 13). This is the worst-case interference model, and will have the largest impact on the network range, and network latency.adjacent channel interference (The Wi-Fi signal is in the the spectrum occupied by the adjacent Zigbee channel, as in the case of Wi-Fi channel 12 and Zigbee channel 24). The level of performance in this case is dependent on the quality of the receivers in the Zigbee network, and the level of adjacent channel power rejection they can maintain.Far away channel interference (as in the case of Wi-Fi channel 12 and Zigbee channel 11). This is the best case setup, as the level of interference will be minimized between the two networks.Care must be taken when deploying spatially co-located Zigbee and Wi-Fi networks to avoid worst-case interference as seen in the co-channel case. Even in the more ideal cases of adjacent channel and far off channel interference, this will adversely impact the performance of both networks,so this must be accounted for when designing, and setting up these networks.Note that it is also possible to enable the Wi-Fi and Zigbee radios to communicate with each other in a side-channel to minimize the amount of interference that will be experienced. This mechanism is described as packet traffic arbitration in IEEE 802.15.2 (2003), and can provide some level of improvement deployments where there is no side-channel coexistence management.

Can someone see my activities if I'm on their wifi?

In addition to the already good answers; Even if you are using https to encrypt your connection, the initial DNS lookup is still visible. Even if you use VPN, you can still do signal analysis to determine extra information (eg if you can hear the TV from a few rooms, when traffic spikes from a device, it is more likely to be from a room where there is an ad playing. Likewise if your target has some significant files to download/upload, you can differentiate between video playing/voip and manual file upload/downloads simply due to packet size and timing).

How much does Tesla connectivity cost?

Tesla Model S/X/3 are equipped with FM radio, GPS satellite-radio navigation, 4G LTE cellular service, BlueTooth LE and IEEE 802.11b/g/n WiFi for Internet access. None of these wireless connectivities require subscription except for cellular service (WiFi requires authorized access to a nearby secured WiFi Internet Gateway Router).You’ll have to ask Tesla Motors about the cost, lifetime (4G LTE cellular) data service subscription comes bundled with their vehicles at no annual cost to owners and enables Tesla to communicate with their vehicles in order to download software updates and upload driving data.Tesla Model 3 sedans are also equipped with RFID sensors that detect keycards and keyfobs.

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