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@matthewbodaly
Last active July 7, 2022 21:26
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About a week ago my Internet dropped right before we were going to go on vacation. This is how I got probably the worst possible bandaid to fix it.

background

I live in a building thats been around since the '60s. I have a cable Internet connection where the wire is older than my kids ages combined. Usually every few weeks, the Internet will have a few minutes of complete packet drops and then recover. This time, it was down for over 15 minutes. This happened right before we were about to leave on vacation so I did the bare minimum of "turning it on again" and reseating connections. No dice. This would have to wait until after I was back from the trip.

post vacation

After getting back from vacation, I contacted our ISP who walked me through... resetting the connection and ... reseating wires, still didn't work so a tech was scheduled. In the meantime, the kids kept asking for the Internet to be setup so I fired up the hotspot we used on trips. This works fine, but I really didn't want to reconfigure every single "smart" device just for a couple days, so I did what any normal person would do... the worst setup with the least number of wires run.

the bandaid

Here's how the apartment is connected to the Internet.

  1. Disable the Wi-Fi on the hotspot.
  2. Connect the hotspot to the mac mini sitting in the corner.
  3. Run a Powerline Ethernet connector from the mac mini to the nearest outlet.
  4. Connect the other Powerline Ethernet adapter from the wall to the WAN port of the router.
  5. Enable connection sharing in macOS from the hotspot to the Ethernet connection.
  6. Restart the router.

Everything is back. No need to change any device settings.

I'm so sorry (for the powerline Ethernet adapter part).

the bandaid (part two)

  1. Disable the Wi-Fi on the hotspot
  2. Connect the hotspot to the new travel router I got (https://www.gl-inet.com/products/gl-mt300n-v2/)
  3. Connect the WAN from the cable modem to the WAN port of the travel router.
  4. Enable tethering on the travel router.
  5. Connect the LAN port from the travel router to the WAN port on my home router.

Now I have a failover device.

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