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What was life like in 2000 compared to 2017?

First of all, there was no Quora and never I never thought by that time that I would be typing up this answer here.99% of Indians never had a mobile phone or internet connectivity including me. 2–3 hours of a free day at home wouldn’t got spend in phones in 2000 checking up messages ,statuses and of course : quora !It was the period of time in India, where software professionals were considered as heroes. I remember I had an aunt who was very eager to marry an engineer working in IT sector. 17 years since then ,when I got such a job offer via campus placement ,she didn’t mind at all. Things change !None of us used to hear lot of cancer stories.There wasn’t much traffic in roads in 2000, atleast in Kerala towns.Friends used to hangout just for the sake of satisfaction of having fun time outside and not for putting stories in Instagram or whatsapp.People used to go to real libraries for looking up for references because internet wasn’t easily reachable by all then.Air travel was not cheaper as it is today.I found last day that flying from Cochin to Bangalore was as cheap as INR 765. Bus costed INR 1450 on the same day.( Almost double )Booking a train ticket wasn’t as easy as doing it online. We had to go to railway station.The kind of flying to west for studies wasn’t as prevalant as today. 90% of People who went to US or Canada that time had studies in first priority than migration.Canada is the present most loved destination ,at least by South Indians. I think Canada is overtaking Australia as the preference for South Indians.Dubai ain’t as loved at present as it used to be back then. For mallus, Canada is the new ‘heaven’.The world wasn’t anticipated about what will Donald Trump do back then. !The kind of business that coaching institutes hold in India was not prevailing back then. It’s a million dollar business now: GATE Coaching ,CAT coaching , UPSC ,KPSC ,PPSC and all those sort of things.I was 5 years old back then in 2000 and I turned 23 in 2017. I transformed from a child to teenager to young adult. OMG ! I did graduate.Like any 90’s kid ,my super hero was Shaktiman in Doordarshan. Being a mallu kid and weak in Hindi back then ,I used to change channels between DD Malayalam and DD national as there used to be a 2 minutes difference between both when Shaktiman was telecasted.I used to beg to my parents to not take me to marriages and other functions that used to happen on Sundays when Shaktiman was being telecasted.99% of Indians who had a TV at their home never had a set-top box or cable TV connection that would give 100–500 channels that they recieve today.

How can I decide to buy a washing machine between Samsung and LG in India?

Hey… tanx for asking Jabil Mohammad. As per your request.. I’ve considered 2 models - LG and Samsung to help you in picking the right one for your home requirements. Let’s get started!LG Washing MachineThis LG fully automatic front load washing machine is pretty much suitable for bachelors, couples and small family consisting of 4–5 members. Hence, it is considered as one of the best budget washing machines that are in great demand now.Generally, all the branded machine motors are directly connected to the drum. But, this LG washing machine features an inverting technology that helps to connect drum and motor and saves power too.It has 6kgs of tank capacity to put clothes inside and if exceeds the limit, machine stops functioning. So, you must be very careful in placing the clothes (i.e. in required quantities). Doing it so frequently decreases the performance of front load washing machine.The 6 motion DD technology provides great combinations for each fabric type. Further, it helps to deliver powerful washing performance with less damage. On an average, the machine runs at a speed of 1450 rpm to wash and dry the clothes quickly.The smart diagnosis system troubleshoots issues with an ease. It effectively communicates with computer and diagnoses the problem in seconds with instant solution.Amazing features of LG Washing Machine6 kg of tank capacity.Smart diagnosis option.6 motion DD technology.1450 rpm of rotational speed.Comes with inverting technology.Sleek and stylish design structure.2-years compressive warranty services.Samsung Washing MachineWhen it comes to durable and quick washing nature, no other brand can compete with Samsung front load washing machine. It is suitable to wash baby dress, delicate, denim, cotton, synthetics, wool, spin and dry with hassle-free functioning.If you have no time in the morning and want to operate quickly, switch to quick 15 mode to perform washing, spinning and drying in just 15-minutes. The unique diamond drum with small holes prevents the clothes sticking out and being damaged.It incorporates a digital inverter technology to work efficiently even at power-cut times and to save electricity bills, minimal noise, and long lasting performance.The large size LCD display features temperature, spin, delay, soak options that can be handling with a single touch buttons by gently pressing for 3 seconds.Amazing features of Samsung Washing MachineStabilizer-free operation.1000 rpm of spinning speed.Features digital inverter technology.2-years on product, 5 years on motor.Aqua stop option and diamond drum.Wide display unit with touch buttons.

What’s the best way to provide strong coverage single SSID WiFi in a three floor 3000 sq ft house. The service is gigabit fiber and the router/modem is Centurylink?

It really depends on how much you want/can spend and how much work you can/are willing to do.You might be able to get good coverage with one good router set up in/near the center of the first floor. The newer/ist 802.11ac routers have really good range, but it will also depend on the construction of the house. Poured concrete floors are harder to penetrate than wood or composite floors, and differing construction materials, radiant barriers (the shiny ones) I understand cause issues.I’m not a great fan of traditional/universal range extenders, they do work but they come with a often pretty hefty performance cost.You could go with one of the Mesh wireless systems, they are basically built for situations like this, and they tend to come with dedicated radios for the back-haul to the main router, in this case I would consider putting the main unit on the second floor so that each sub-unit can connect back to the main unit, and doesn’t have to daisy chain through another sub-unit to reach the main unit. Though you might be able to get both sub-units to connect to the main unit even if it were in the first floor. A mesh network is likely to do a better job at hand-offs and offer other advanced WiFi features/options.Me personally, I would look into and likely run CAT-6 (or in a pinch CAT-5e) cable to each floor, to use to connect the main router to sub-routers/access points in an all WiFi setup. If there were devices that are unlikely to move or that cannot use WiFi then I would tend to want to use wired gigabit Ethernet wherever I could. I would use gigabit, because the cost for switches and the like are not that much more than the price of similar 10/100 equipment.For layout I would proabibly not use home-runs but instead smart-switches on each floor.You could use gigabit MoCA (Ethernet over coax cable) or Ethernet over powerline to get connectivity from the main unit/router to the sub-units/APs.But back to finishing answering your question, single SSID, that should/work on an mesh system that has the proper features/standards supported.I personally don’t use single SSID instead I use SSID’s that identify where the WiFi router/AP is at and I just use a common password/passphrase. That way I can pick the best or nearest WiFi source or at least see where my device is connected to, if I had or felt that I had a speed issue. However I don’t move my device much or can tolerate interuptions in WiFi when switching between or to a new WiFi source. It sounds like single SSID does make for faster roaming in a true mesh/AP system.Some routers have WDS and they may or may not have support roaming or seamless roaming, it looks like 802.11k, 802.11r, and 802.11v are the standards that are involved with WiFi roaming with 802.11k being the main one.Some routers come with that/those standards and by using devices that support that standard your device should connect to the WiFi source with the strongest signal… It also looks like you could use DD-WRT to add features to compatible routers, but you will have to check/verify since that’s not something I’ve checked for or am using.I don’t have a large multi-floor house, but I am using a main Wi-Fi router and have two older routers being used an AP’s so I have more effective WiFi bandwidth available for the surprisingly many WiFi only devices in the home. The three WiFi sources are connected by wired Ethernet. I use an unique SSID for each device and band, so the main unit might have an SSID of “1Floor” and “1Floor_5” (to ID 1st floor 2.4 Ghz and 1st Floor 5 Ghz). I use similar but unique SSID’s for every WiFi source (again the password/passphrase are all the same). I then “assign” WiFi only devices to different WiFi sources based on where they are at, the bands they support and the bandwidth each device needs. I also use a gigabit AC class WiFi router and gigabit smart switches as the core of my home network, and have everything else to include some 10/100 switches and AP’s hanging off of it as my built as I went along home network.I was having issues mainly with streaming, and what I figured out was that there were too many devices connecting to the then single WiFi source using the 2.4 Ghz band (Saturation I think it’s called, they were all sharing the same WiFi bandwidth). When I forced the devices that could use 5Ghz to that band (no range issues) then I found that those few devices suddenly started working better because they were able to get more WiFi bandwidth. My issue was not internet bandwidth (200 Mbps service) but the WiFi bandwidth available to each device.Each WiFi router has between 1 and now 4 “radios” in them for each band (2.4 or 5 Ghz) and each radio is able to support a certain amount of bandwidth depending on the standard (802.11 a,b,g,n,ac) and the channel width (20, 40, 80, 160 Mhz) and as a general rule the newer the standard and the wider the channel the more data that WiFi device can carry/provide to the client devices connected to it. Of course the client device must be able to support the higher standards to be able to take advantage of the faster WiFi. Also using an older standard WiFi device can cause other devices connected to that WiFi source (usually only in the same band) to all slow down, this is due to the way interoperability and compatibility works. So in WiFi sources it’s often best to disable those older standards if you have no devices that use them, especially 802.11b and to a lesser level 802.11b, but you have to keep in mind that if you do this, that devices that need 802.11b or g won’t be able to connect. I bought a Pure Jongo WiFi speaker and it gave me fits, in the end I found out that it was an 802.11b/g device, I never considered that a WiFi device that came out around 2012/13 wouldn’t support 802.11n. So keep that in mind if you disable “legacy support” or pick 802.11n and ac only modes. In general the faster the router is, the more radios it has inside AC 1450 and 1900 class devices have (3 x 3) radios inside the faster AC class devices have (4 x 4) or sometimes even more, and in general the more “radios” you have the more devices you can connect and the more overall WiFi bandwidth you have available to share among the connected devices in each band.As usual I’m rambling and moving off topic.So to recap, a single AC class router (especially the type with external antennas) in the center of the house on the first floor might be enough to get you WiFi everywhere, and that WiFi might be enough and fast enough for your needs. You could use a single SSID for all the WiFi sources, but if there is no support for roaming or seamless roaming, then the devices will likely not roam until after the WiFi signal actually dropped off.You could look into mesh or whole home WiFi systems that have recently become popular, they can be a bit pricey, but if you pick carefully you could end up with a totally wireless system that provides good/great signal as well as speed to the WiFi devices in your home. It the system you pick is not that great, then you could end up with unsatisfactory performance and be unhappy. But a well built/designed system with dedicated radios/bandwidth for the backbone (used to carry data to and from the main unit) and good seamless roaming support is likely to please. If the system does not have dedicated radios for the backbone, you could (if the system allows it) to use gigabit MoCA or Ethernet over power-line to build/make a fast backbone to support the sub-units in a mesh or whole home system if that was the only issue. I’d think that buying one that works out of the box would be cheaper than buying one and then adding more stuff to actually make it work.I would recommend avoiding range extenders in general.I prefer to use wired Ethernet and gigabit wired Ethernet is the way I prefer to connect high/heavy use items in my home network. 10/100 just doesn’t really cut it when you are trying to move large amounts of data from one device to another, especially if you have NAS(s) or Media Servers in your home. Because your network will be limited by the slowest link that the data has to pass through to reach your device.I apologize for getting long, but I try to put it all out there instead of being concise and leaving stuff that may be important out.I do hope that you found this info to be helpful/useful.And I do wish you luck in finding the WiFi solution that best fits your needs.

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