I’m planning out my next homelab when I move soon. I have the floor plans and it looks like the best place for my computer is not centrally located, so the Wi-Fi won’t be ideal. I’d like to run the cables a short distance so the router would be in a better spot.

I’m just renting and will likely only be here for a year so I don’t want to do any drilling. I just want to secure the cables somehow to the crease where the wall and ceiling meet.

The total length will only be about 20 feet to the router.

  • Treczoks@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    If you don’t care for the looks, just put it down where needed, and fix it to whatever is around with cable ties.

    I did the same in my daughters shared accommodation. Officially they had wifi in all the student rooms, but my daughters room basically had no reception, so I ran a cable from the other end of the flat where the router was down the staircase into her room for a local AP. When she moved out, it was a quick job with a pair of pliers to get it out again.

  • tabular@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Buy rug, put rug over cable on floor, disregard any discouragement of steps 1 or 2.

  • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Painters tape is great… but it’s blue. Maybe attach white tape to the top of painters tape? Not sure how it’ll look. Right now I just have the cable running at the floor and I’ve forgotten about it

    • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Painters tape is fucking gold. I use it SO much, from labeling food in the fridge to holding table cloths on. It’s the best.

  • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    I have done exactly this.

    Ikea wire management pack. Seriously. It used pin nails so at that height it is literally invisible and you don’t have to spackle when you leave.

    They are white and with a white cable and white wall, they are close to invisible.

    They are sturdy, but easily removable. Worst case you can pull the cable 90 degrees to the nail-in angle and they will all pop out.

    They don’t cause damage either to the paint like those fucking sticky raceways and hooks ALWAYS do, even when properly removed.

  • empireOfLove@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Is there trim in the crease or it is a sharp corner? If there is trim and its not painted clean over, you can cheat and use paperclips. Fold the long leg out straight, so its horizontal, and the short U curl down at a 90, so it forms a hook. If you stick the horizontal wire in behind the trim itll usually wedge in without damaging the trim or paint visibly and hold enough for a cat5e.

    If no trim, the sticky hangars are probably the best. Be careful not to buy cheap ones that might fall down, leave residue, or stick too hard and rip the paint off when you go to remove it.

  • sysadmin420@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Does Linksys still have their velop line? Back when I rented I used to use them as wireless bridges, at the time they were way faster than my Internet was… I believe they handle jussst about gig probably way more now with wifi 6 .

    I’d use them to jump network segments around the house, they worked great.

    Each floor had a switch wired to it with All devices from that floor.

    They’d use a dedicated 5g backhaul ( extra wifi radios ) to link them together exactly like mesh networks work. Or you could plug switches or even just an Xbox into their Ethernet port and the whole network was accessable like it was wired.

    I used to use the 3 wifi pack, and id put one on each floor directly above the other on each floor of my 3000 sq foot home at the time.

    I’m pretty sure it was expensive, but most mesh systems will work this way, and usually the two radios do not interfere with each other so speeds were good.

    I also bought actual wireless bridges, maybe tplink, and they were fine but they’d randomly crash after heavy BitTorrent use back then, velop was always solid for me, but now I use unifi dream machine se, and drill holes so I can get 10gig with my 2 gig fiber

    Or even better (cheaper and easier) I’ve also run cat 6 along the outside of the houses I rented with black plenum cable, using the existing coax taca, I’d cut the coax In rooms I didn’t need, I was cable modem, streaming TV only so only needed eth where the modem was and run my Ethernet outside to different parts of the house for about 6 years zero problems, in South Dakota, USA since I my area, cable and satellite guys installed everyone’s homes that way. So I’d use their plate location and just punch it down, and add a faceplate.

  • 8adger@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I had a friend that ran theirs though the air conditioning ducts. For mine though I ran them in the corners and under area rugs.