My Mom Is My Wifi

My Mom Is My Wifi




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Is it possible to connect my mom's computer to my WiFi when I live behind her on the next street?
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It depends on the distances involved, and your particular circumstances. The typical range of a WiFi router is 30 metres (about 100 feet), however signal strength will drop off at this range causing a slow or frequently disconnection WiFi connection. There are a couple of methods you can use to improve the range:
It depends on the distances involved, and your particular circumstances. The typical range of a WiFi router is 30 metres (about 100 feet), however signal strength will drop off at this range causing a slow or frequently disconnection WiFi connection. There are a couple of methods you can use to improve the range:
Hopefully this can help. WiFi repeaters are probably most likely to help, but be sure to do research to see if they are appropriate to your scenario,
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Yes, you could use wifi repeater from your house each at around 50$ in every 100m plus ups to power each up - will have to recharge them whenever they drain up too - so it's cheaper to get her a regular internet from a local ISP provider for about 29$ a month.
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Is it right for my mum to turn off the wifi?
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Answered 4 years ago · Author has 5.5K answers and 15.5M answer views
She’s not wrong. I’m sure you have plenty of time to surf during the day.
Or to put it a better way, she is your Mum, so she is automatically right - even if she’s wrong. Every word of your question indicates a mother who loves and cares about her children very much indeed. Consider yourself unbelievably lucky. If you don’t, you should do some surfing about how the vast majority of kids in the world grow up. Trust me, they don’t complain about the WiFi.
As long as you are in a house or flat that Mum keeps clean and warm, eating food Mum bought and prepared, wearing clothes Mum bought for you and washes for you, surfing on a computer Mum bought, using WiFi Mum pays for…
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I agree to your explanation of not being distracted even if mom thinks you get distracted.
But. She is a mom… I would like to question you in reverse that why do she need to do that? I am a person who born in 90’s so we didn’t had the thing “WIFI”in nights to surf on internet in the age of standard 7th, so our only distraction in summer and monsoon were the “LIGHTS”in our rooms and in the winters and the monsoon were also“LIGHTS ”. and we didn’t try to ask the question that why mom is turning OFF LIGHTS and take it away from us?… It is simple my friend, as You are growing from LIGHTS to WIFI, s
I agree to your explanation of not being distracted even if mom thinks you get distracted.
But. She is a mom… I would like to question you in reverse that why do she need to do that? I am a person who born in 90’s so we didn’t had the thing “WIFI”in nights to surf on internet in the age of standard 7th, so our only distraction in summer and monsoon were the “LIGHTS”in our rooms and in the winters and the monsoon were also“LIGHTS ”. and we didn’t try to ask the question that why mom is turning OFF LIGHTS and take it away from us?… It is simple my friend, as You are growing from LIGHTS to WIFI, she has to also think relatively an alternative to force to get up from your bed and get ready for your daily routine.
She is a mom since centuries from the MOM word was created, and she has adjusted with our generation change and we should also take it as a normal thing and get up from our bed and listen to her .after all its for our own good.you can do your internet browsing by the way in other times when mom will not think that you are spending much time on internet!!!!
I hope my answer helps you.take care….
idea behind this is just to understand what is good for us.
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Answered 4 years ago · Author has 84 answers and 146.8K answer views
I am not sure why everyone is so Authoritarian “ Her house , Her RULES”. It’s like parents enslaves their children.
Your mum loves you and wants you to sleep well. So try discuss with her how it’s unsatisfactory for you to only use the internet for only 15 min. and try to search for solutions.
You don’t have to change the rules to use the internet more for example you can change your style like taking a break for 30 min 7:00pm to use the internet then continue studying till 9:00 pm (last 15 min without internet). so you gained 15 min more to use the internet.
or try to be innovative to find a middle ground in the end your mum loves you and wants you to be happy.
Answered 4 years ago · Author has 19.1K answers and 42M answer views
Your mom’s reasoning is right, and healthy. More and more, it’s being discovered that late evening internet use interferes with proper sleep patterns [1]. These problems are particularly exacerbated in youth. Some of the problems seen are insomnia, leg pain, and excess body movement.
Daytime problems associated with night internet use include excess sleepiness, ADHD, anxiety, depression, and learning disorders.
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I am nearly 15 and my mom turns the WiFi off every single night. How can I convince her not to?
What I understand is that your mum really just doesn't want you on your phone after you go to bed. (No offense, but many, many others do it) A simple alternative would be to do your homework right when you come home from school, it would be a good idea because then you wouldn’t be as tired. What calls onto my attention is why you desperately need wifi for browsing when homework is rarely done online? If you go on your phone while claiming you are doing your homework, just, don’t do it. As the years progress, you will find yourself with 3 hours worth of homework every night and it will keep getting worse and worse. You claim to be in year 7 and that, I tell you, is the worst time to break into a bad habit involving procrastination.
Answered 4 years ago · Author has 151 answers and 237.7K answer views
In life there are rules, usually made by other people that have control of such things, that you must learn to follow. Even when you don’t like the rule.
If you wish to evade the rule, the best choice of action is to have your own control, and make the rules.
What this means is that, she pays for it, she owns it, she decides what is and isn’t allowed. This is basically true for all of life.
Even a street speed limit. If you dislike the speed limit, pave your own street, and decide how you want people to drive on it.
Hey, I never said it was easy to be the one making the rules…but when you have put in the work to reach a point where you get to make the rules, you learn quickly how important the rules are and find yourself enforcing rules that you never thought you would.
Answered 4 years ago · Author has 96 answers and 292.5K answer views
Who knows . . . It ‘s hard to judge why . . . In your predicament, I’d switch modality and start reading a real book, since it does not need internet connection or electricity. Changing modality keeps your mind flexible and, in this case, avoids confrontation. Maybe you can request an extra 15 minutes with every xyz grade improvement?
Answered 4 years ago · Author has 53 answers and 235K answer views
I’m sorry. But it’s HER house, HER rules, and HER wifi that SHE pays for. SHE gets full control.
If you go to bed at 9:00 then it is a good idea as you brain needs a time to rest from the screen before you go to bed otherwise your brain is repeating what you have done on the internet so it takes you longer to get to sleep.
Yes, your mom was right. Learn to take breaks from the Internet. Take the information you get from the internet and apply it IRL.
Answered 3 years ago · Author has 197 answers and 1.4M answer views
Is it right for a mother to turn the Internet connection off at night for someone almost 20?
Also depends on the reason why you need the wifi. (Warning: what I say after my answer might trigger some old people)
Is it to watch YouTube all night/play games with friends all night and be tired the next morning? If so, your mother is absolutely right in turning it off at night. It’s for your own good, and getting angry over the fact that you can’t have entertainment at night is a little immature.
Is it because you’re working part-time and only have the night time to finish your assignments that often require the Internet? Then no, she shouldn’t do that. Talk to your mother with your reason a
Also depends on the reason why you need the wifi. (Warning: what I say after my answer might trigger some old people)
Is it to watch YouTube all night/play games with friends all night and be tired the next morning? If so, your mother is absolutely right in turning it off at night. It’s for your own good, and getting angry over the fact that you can’t have entertainment at night is a little immature.
Is it because you’re working part-time and only have the night time to finish your assignments that often require the Internet? Then no, she shouldn’t do that. Talk to your mother with your reason and if she still says no, then you just have to either move out or manage your time even better.
The next bit doesn’t really answer your question, but I just would like to say that “their house, their rules” isn’t always applicable to everyone. The poster (whom I shall not name) has disabled comments but I’d like to say that this rule is basically dictatorship. If a president said “my country, my rules” and did things his own way without consulting other Senators or taking votes, would you happily accept that?
Then why is this rule accepted? Because those people have had parents who were reasonable with their decisions that they could abide by and always had the choice of moving out if they didn’t like it.
My mother is very strict with the Internet. She doesn’t let us use the computer at all, day or night, unless it’s to do with studying. Even then you have to be in her sight when using the computer. We’re not allowed a smartphone either. If you try to buy one in secret, she will destroy it - it’s happened to me before. So unless you can study 24/7 like a robot, our home environment is basically entertainment-free.
The problem is, the world has changed so that the Internet is basically the store of all the knowledge in the world. That’s the truth. And because of my major (Physiology and Statistics) my studies always require a lot of research. I can’t conduct experiments at home, and books take more time because I have to find what I’m looking for in a 1700-page textbook. Even with the table of contents, it’s still time-consuming. And if it turns out that what you were looking for isn’t in the textbook at all, then you have to go to the library the next day and find another.
I usually have 2 lab reports due per week. As in, I have to write abstract + introduction + methods + results + conclusion + discussions times two in a week, plus keep up with my Statistics assignments that require a computer programme to analyse the data with and my part time job as a tutor. It’s good pay (almost twice that of what most of my friends receive from their other jobs) but I have to prepare for it just that much (think about what I’m going to teach, what I’m going to give for homework, etc).
My friend on the other hand has 5 lab reports due per week and has two part time jobs.
I struggle to do everything during the day so sometimes I end up sleeping late at like 3am to finish it all. My friend sleeps at 4am. We still turn up for the morning lectures. We’re pretty high achievers, despite the busy schedules.
The difference is that my friend has no restrictions placed on his use of technology, whereas I do. So for me, finishing everything by the deadline is sometimes a walk on a string, not even a tight rope - it’s so stressful.
I moved out briefly for 6 months, but I had to move back in due to my mother’s health conditions. She asked me to come back and help her with the chores and provide support. I did, due to moral obligations, but her restrictions remained no matter what I said. She does ask me for rent too.
When I tell her that I have difficulty completing my assignments on time (not that I’ve ever been late anyway, miraculously) without technology, she tells me off for “wasting my time” on tutoring. But then…how am I supposed to support myself? I don’t go to parties (I can’t), I don’t hang out with my friends as often as they do (I can’t - and this resulted in loss of a few friends as we couldn’t keep in touch) and my friends always complain that I don’t respond to their Facebook messages or tags (I can’t). So what else should I cut down on? Nothing. I have nothing left to cut down on.
I’m basically here due to moral obligations - I don’t want to leave my mother alone when she’s sick. But sometimes this feels like a prison. It’s not illegal to leave home, but I can’t just up and go simply because I don’t like her rules. When the poster (+ some people) claimed that it’s either obey or leave, I was a bit annoyed. Your experience isn’t everything there is to a parent-child relationship. Sometimes in life it’s NOT about legal obligations, it’s NOT about “just move out”. I admit that many people share the “just move out” view and some have done it despite their parents getting too sick to support themselves. But my values don’t allow me to do that. I think it’s cruel. Life doesn’t work like that and I’ve learned it the hard way. So judging somebody else’s situation based on yours is a bit ignorant.
Does my mother pay for the Internet? Yes, she does.
Is the house under her name? Yes, it is.
But is this “her house, her rules” fair on me? Absolutely not. IT KILLS ME ALMOST EVERY DAY. Why does it have to feel like I’m stuck here simply because it’s her house?
Sometimes parents need to respect their grown children, and that being said, the respect only goes if the children are being reasonable. If the children are being irresponsible and lacking self-control, I see nothing wrong with restrictions.
Also the same people who believed in this rule seem to look down on the younger generation for “having it easier” but that’s another ignorant way to think about other people’s struggles. Each generation has had their own difficulties, whether it’s war, economic depression or whatever. In this generation, the competition has increased drastically compared to the older ones because everything is pretty much international. You’re competing with everyone from around the world who wants the same thing as you, not with the local blokes that live on your street or in your town. The world has changed. It has moved on and left the younger generation with its own difficulties.
Not only that, the costs of university have drastically increased too. One of my professors told me that her student loan was only $15,000 for her Bachelor’s degree when she was studying because that’s just how cheap it was back in the day. Nowadays, for the same degree (which takes about 3–4 years), it’s $15,000 per year (in my country) - I wish I was exaggerating. And should I mention the environmental damage the older generation has caused out of ignorance?
So in some ways, that are different to the older ones, younger generation does have it worse.
What you’re arguing is basically “you have no right to be sad, we’ve had it worse” - that’s the same logic as saying “you have no right to be happy, we’ve had it better”. Or saying that to someone with depression. “We’ve had it worse”. What a stupid argument. Your hardship does not negate the hardship of others. Can we all please just remember that and appreciate each other for making through their own difficulties? Have some more understanding. Please.
Why does my husband turn off his WiFi when he comes home?
How do you turn on your WiFi at night after your parents turned it off?
How can I turn off WiFi for WhatsApp uses?
Are your parents turn off the WiFi at night?
How do I convince my parents to stop turning off my WiFi at 10 pm every night?
How can I turn off my wifi remotely?
Should your WiFi be switched off at night? Is there any risk in keeping it on?
Should I leave WiFi calling on all the time?
I am nearly 15 and my mom turns the WiFi off every single night. How can I convince her not to?
How can I get around my mom turning off the WiFi?
Is it right fo
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