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46 points

No no, everyone knows you’re supposed to put a mirror behind it, duh.

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51 points
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Funnily enough this may actually have a positive impact

People used to create tinfoil, tin can or wok based reflectors for WiFi to guide the omnidirectional signal into becoming a directional one.

I think the reflective part of some mirrors is essentially tin foil, so it probably would have a mild boosting effect in the direction of the mirror

Edit: in fact if OP’s fan has a rounded metal cage on it, you could take the front half off and you’ve basically got a WokFi setup there, with added danger

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17 points
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A wire in a Pringles can makes for a fabulous directional can-tenna

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Also if it’s close enough, the metal of the fan itself serves as a pretty decent antennae. You can accomplish the same by taping a fork to the box!

It’s the silliest little lifehack yet wrapping a wire around a fork, then wrapping the other end around the router works so well

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4 points

You’re not wrong. Matter of fact, you’re absolutely right!

Back around 2011, I used a pie pan and USB WiFi dongle to snag the neighbor’s WiFi. My pie pan contraption basically tripled the signal strength, and I never had a single dropout. 👍

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4 points

i have used a long tin can, similar to a pringles can before to steal a neighbour wifi back in the day. this is legit

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3 points

Modern wifi APs have beamforming algorithms. No reflector required.

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2 points

I’ve heard about this but not had loads of time to read into how it works and how effective the algorithms are. Do you happen to know about it in depth? I’ve wondered for a while how much efficiency is actually improved by the beamforming and what the limitations are

Like I’ve read about cantennas that fire 802.11g over several hundred meters, which in my understanding is obviously is out of reach for regular WiFi antenna even with beamforming algorithms (or is it? I actually don’t know)

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2 points

Yep, and the fan moving in back almost certainly will fuck up beamforming as reflections are fairly important to get the beam to do object avoidance and if your reflective surface is angled and moving quickly…

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1 point

The reflective part of mirrors is silver, but yes

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2 points

But how does the mirror knows what’s behind the paper?!

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Memes

!memes@lemmy.ml

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