In my house we currently have NTL broadband, we have one computer linked to this and we regularly use this to use the internet. I have recently got a compuet in my bedroom and I want to have the internet there. I have heard you can ring NTL and get them so extend your current line so you have 2 computers going through the same line, is this correct? If so how much will it cost? If not then how can I go about doing this please?! thanks
A router is like a transmitter - it sends the internet signal out.
The dongle is like the aerial - it picks the signal up and connects.
You connect the router to your modem so that the signal is sent out around the house, you plug the dongle into the usb port on your computer and it connects the computer to the internet without wires.
I am not recommending this router or the seller - this is just as an example:
If you're happy to lay some ethernet wires through to the other computer from where your modem is, you can just pick up a regular router (non-wireless). If you want to do it wirelessly, then get a wireless router as ethel says.
Why don't you contact NTL - I'm sure they must install with routers and bearing in mind it's cable not BT, maybe (I really don't know, I'm just spouting possibilities!) it has to be a certain type or configured in a certain way.
I know nothing, but my other half does, and we run 3 computers via a router bought from ebuyer or ebay, on NTL broadband, to me it looks like it acts basically like extension sockets do, you plug three computers into it and it has one plug into the modem, it might not be as simple as that but it seems to be.
I was in the same situation few years ago.
I just bought a Belkin router at Dixons
and some ethernet cables.
The router was not for cable specificly ( as opposed to ADSL ), it only had ethernet sockets. This is fine if your cable modem has an ethernet interface.