Networking Your Home

    Connecting your home computers lets you share drives, printers, and a single Internet connection among the connected computers.

    This chapter contains information about:

Benefits of a home network
The Gateway Connected Home
Connection types
Your connected home shopping list

Using a home network

    A home network lets you:

Share a single Internet connection
Share MP3 audio and MPEG video files
Share computer drives
Share a printer or scanner
Play multi-player games

Sharing a single Internet connection

    A home network makes sharing the Internet easy. Each computer or Internet appliance that is connected to the network can share the same modem and telephone line or broadband connection and access the Internet at the same time. This saves on the cost of installing another telephone line for your second computer and paying for a second Internet Service Provider (ISP) account.

    Important

    Most ISPs allow multiple users at the same time.

    If you use America Online as your ISP, you can:

    • Log onto America Online through one of your screen names and the other computers can access the Internet using an Internet browser.
    • Upgrade your service to America Online for Home Networks. This service allows more than one of your screen names to be online through your home network at one time.

    Sharing MP3 audio and MPEG video files

      With a home network, you can store MP3 audio and MPEG video files on any networked computer, then play them on any of the other computers or devices connected to your home network. Add a digital music player such as the Gateway Connected Music Player, and you can integrate your home stereo system into your network as well.

    Sharing drives

      With a home network, you can copy files from computer to computer by copying and pasting or dragging and dropping. You will no longer waste your time transferring files by using diskettes. In addition, you can map a drive from a remote computer on the network to a drive on a local computer, and access the file as if it were located on the hard drive of the computer you are using.

    Sharing a printer or scanner

      Each computer that is connected to the home network can share the same printer or scanner. Select print from the computer you are currently using and your file is automatically printed on your printer no matter where it is located on your network.

    Playing multi-player games

      With a home network, you can play multi-player games. Load a game like Microsoft Midtown Madness 2 on your computers, and in minutes, you and your friends can race in competing cars through the streets of San Francisco.

    Introducing the Gateway Connected Home

      The Gateway Connected Home connects all your computers and other devices so that you can share files, programs, peripherals, and much more from any computer in your house. The picture below shows an example Gateway Connected Home.

    Components of a Gateway Connected Home

      The Gateway Connected Home begins with two computers and a connection. From there, you can add computers and devices to fit your specific needs. You can connect:

    Any or all of your connected computers to your Internet connection simultaneously.
    A Gateway Connected Touchpad to your connected home so that more than one screen name can log onto America Online simultaneously.
    Your notebook computer to your connected home so you can share files and print at home.
    A Gateway Connected Music Player to your connected home to play MP3 audio files, located on any connected computer, anywhere in your home, either through your stereo system or through powered speakers.

    Selecting a connection

      One of the biggest decisions you will need to make when creating your Gateway Connected Home is what type of connection you will use. Gateway supports two types of wired connections, HPNA and Ethernet.

    What are HPNA and Ethernet?

    HPNA

      Creating an HPNA connected home is as easy as knowing where your telephone jacks and computers are located. HPNA uses your home's standard telephone lines and telephone jacks instead of special cabling to connect computers. You can use your connected home computers at the same time as you connect to your ISP, send a fax, or talk on your telephone. For the best performance, your computers or Internet appliances should have HPNA 2.0 network cards or jacks for connecting to your connected home.

      Important

      If you have more than one telephone line in your home, make sure that all the computers in your connected home are connected to jacks that share the same telephone number.

      Ethernet

        Ethernet is a type of connection commonly used in offices around the world. This type of connection can also be used to build small computer networks in the home. Ethernet is available at two different speeds: standard Ethernet, which runs at the same speed as HPNA 2.0, and Fast Ethernet, which runs up to ten times faster. To create an Ethernet connected home, you or your electrician must install special cables in your home. Your computers or Internet appliances must have Ethernet cards or jacks for connecting to a 10 or 10/100 Ethernet switch or hub. If you are connecting just two computers, you can eliminate the switch or hub and use a special crossover cable.

        Important

        Check local code requirements before installing Ethernet cable or other wiring in your home. Your municipality may require you to obtain a permit and hire a licensed installer.

        Assessing your connection needs

          To select the type of connected home that will work best for you, consider how you will use your connected home.

          An HPNA connected home is appropriate if:

        Your home has a telephone jack with the same phone number in each room that has a device you want to connect
        You have several Windows-based computers that are used for drive sharing, printing to a single printer, or surfing the Internet
        Your notebook computer has one of the following:
        An HPNA jack for connecting to a telephone jack
        A USB port to connect to a HPNA adapter
        Your connection needs are less than 8000 Kbps (see "Comparing data transfer speed")

          An Ethernet or Fast Ethernet connected home is appropriate if:

        You are building a new home or your existing home already has Ethernet cable installed in each room that has a device you want to connect
        You have a combination of Windows-based computers and non-Windows-based computers that are used for drive sharing, printing to a single printer, or surfing the Internet
        Your notebook computer has an Ethernet jack for connecting to the network

        Comparing data transfer speed

          When deciding between HPNA and Ethernet, compare the different data transfer speeds provided by each to the programs you plan to run in your connected home. The following table shows programs that you may run in your home and the connection speed each requires.

        Program Speed Required

        Voice over IP (VoIP)

        5-20 Kbps

        Multiplayer Game

        20-80 Kbps

        Dial-up Internet

        24-56 Kbps

        MP3 Audio

        80-200 Kbps

        Printer Sharing

        80-200 Kbps

        Broadband Internet

        100-1000 Kbps

        File Sharing

        300-40000 Kbps

        MPEG Video

        4000-8000 Kbps

          Source: Computer Shopper, January 2001

          The following table shows the Gateway-supported connected home type and the maximum speed each will attain.

        Connection Type Typical Maximum Speed

        HPNA 1.0

        700 Kbps

        USB-based HPNA 2.0

        4500 Kbps

        PCI-based HPNA 2.0 or standard Ethernet

        8000 Kbps

        Fast Ethernet

        up to 100,000 Kbps

          Source: Computer Shopper, January 2001

          When comparing the speed at which your connected home will need to run to the speed you can get from the connection type, you should consider which programs may run at the same time in your connected home.

          For example, you have stored several MP3 audio files in your connected home. You typically play music on your Gateway Connected Music Player, and at the same time your teenager may play music on another computer. Playing two MP3 audio files simultaneously requires 200 Kbps + 200 Kbps = 400 Kbps. If at the same time you are playing two MP3 audio files, you also print a file to your printer, the speed required increases to 200 Kbps + 200 Kbps + 200 Kbps = 600 Kbps.

          A comparison of the two tables on the previous page shows that both HPNA 2.0 and standard Ethernet can handle most programs in a connected home. If you anticipate using a combination of programs that regularly exceed 8000 Kbps, you should consider installing Fast Ethernet for your connection.

        Connected home shopping list

          Use the following shopping lists when purchasing equipment for your connected home.

        HPNA

          For an HPNA connected home you need:

        An HPNA card installed in each computer

        - OR -

        HPNA/V.90 combination card installed in each computer

        - OR -
            A USB HPNA adapter attached to each computer
        Telephone cable going from each computer to the closest telephone jack

          Important

          Your Gateway computer may already have a factory installed HPNA/V.90 combination card.

          All HPNA components should be HPNA 2.0. A mixture of HPNA 1.0 and HPNA 2.0 components will result in your connected home running at the slower HPNA 1.0 speed.

          Ethernet

            For an Ethernet connected home you need:

          An Ethernet card installed in each computer
          An Ethernet hub or switch with enough ports for each computer and device in the connected home (hubs are slightly cheaper than switches but may run slower than switches)
          Ethernet cable going from each computer to the hub or switch

            Important

            All Ethernet components should be either standard Ethernet (10 Mbps) or Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps). A mixture of Ethernet and Fast Ethernet components will result in your connected home running at the slower speed.

            For more information

              For more information about the Gateway Connected Home, discuss your particular needs with your Gateway Country Store representative. In addition, several books and Internet sites are dedicated to home networking. Refer to these sources for more information about networking your home with either HPNA or Ethernet.