How WiFi Works - Computerphile

195,364
0
Published 2022-05-02

All Comments (21)
  • guys stop posting interesting topics when i am currently watching something else which i am also interested in
  • Wow, I've never thought about the fact that Wi-Fi routers can only transmit one packet at a time to a single receiver. And the final example with two people using the same network and the person with a slow connection results in a slow connection for everyone -- it was just mindblowing!
  • @orlovsskibet
    Me: Yeah I know how wi-fi works Steve: Explains how wi-fi really works Me: Ok then, I'm glad I watched it πŸ˜„
  • @Norsilca
    This was fascinating. I had no idea about this aspect of wifi. I feel like this could use a better title than the generic "how wifi works". I almost didn't click on it because I thought it'd be another basics I already knew. This is more like "how your bad signal can slow everyone's wifi".
  • @scienteer3562
    I find it best to think about Energy required to receive a single bit. You can increase the transmitted Energy per Bit by either slowing it down, or increasing the Power.
  • @UpLateGeek
    Yeah, been a network engineer for a decade, studied and worked with multiple wireless data transmission technologies, and whenever anyone asks how wifi works, my stock response is "surprisingly well, when it's not working poorly". What they really want to know is "how can I fix my wifi speed", and most of the time my suggestion is to switch off the 2.4GHz radio in your router and just use the 5GHz one, because there's a lot more free channels so a better chance it will pick one that's not congested. And then if the reception is poor in the furthest reaches of the house, it's really time to invest in a better wifi solution. But at least now if they really want to know how wifi works, I can just point them to this video and save myself the 20 minute explanation!
  • @JeremyMcMahan
    ~30 years in IT. Still learned a lot! Thanks for this video!
  • @BooBaddyBig
    One thing I didn't think of for a long while. There's usually only one radio receiver in a laptop/phone etc which can only listen to one channel at a time. Yet when you click the WiFi button it has to show you all the different base stations, many of which are on different channels. So your device retunes the radio for about a tenth of a second, per second through each of the different channels to find all the base stations. But while it's doing that, it misses packets on the channel it's actually connected to, so they have to be resent! That's why the announcement is every tenth of a second. So there's a bit of jitteriness on WiFi that you don't get with Ethernet.
  • @rodvik
    Atari ST in the background? Thats some legit cred right there :)
  • Thanks for uploading this now, my networks exam is tomorrow! Good luck Imperial Computing second year, hope this video finds you
  • @servv3167
    this should have 10 million subs by now - love computerphile.
  • @mareau2193
    My favourite way of explaining these concepts is using food dye in water. The more dye, the more power. The further out from the origin point of the dye in the water, the further from the wifi router. Add lots of different food dye colors in represents interference from other devices, which you can overcome by using more power (putting more dye in), but eventually you're so saturated that it would take unreasonable amounts of dye to get something representing color, instead of a gross brown/black.
  • Thank you for explaining this. I had a few different experimental SSIDs being broadcast by my AP, each tied to a different VLAN. Now that I know that it's more-or-less radio pollution (because I'm not actively using those SSIDs), I've turned them off until I'm ready to resume experimentation.