Routers Provide Protection and Convenience for your Home Network
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 12:40pm (GMT)
Believe it or not, even though you may only have one computer at your
home, you can benefit from having a router on your home network. With
the amount of spyware and other forms of malware running rampant on the
Internet, any step that you can take to help protect your computer is
certainly worth the time and effort to do so. Having a router offers
more than just the ability to share an internet connection with
computers. By using a router, you can protect yourself from a number of
Internet worries.
But now, having said that, you have to ask yourself a question: "Well,
I only have one computer. What good can a wired or wireless router
really do me? I have my cable modem or my DSL modem that provides my
internet service, because I am in the majority of people in the world
that are now using broadband Internet connection. Why in the world, if
I only have one computer, would I need to have a router? I am not
trying to share my connection between two, three, four, five computers.
I only have one. I can connect directly to my modem and I'm fine."
Well, a router will offer you a couple of important perks.
Most people know that the first benefit of having a wired or wireless
router is the ability to add one or more computers to your home
network. Now granted, you may only have one computer now, but in the
future you may add more computers, especially if you are in a family,
as your kids get older perhaps they will have a desktop of their own in
their room or in another room in the house. With a router already in
place you have everything necessary to hook that computer right into
the Internet without doing any extra work on your part. The workload
will even lessen even more if you purchase a wireless router, because
then you have one computer that is hardwired to the router, and you
don't even have to do that once you get the router set up. And then you
can add multiple computers on the wireless network without having to
run any other cables at all, totally hassle free.
The second perk has to do with enhanced security. Most routers have
what's called a hardware firewall that is built inside the system. You
may have heard the term before, a firewall. Those of you who work for
companies have probably dealt with having a firewall that your
computers have to go through when you send information out, or when
information is coming in. And a firewall is simply a system designed to
prevent unauthorized access to or from a private network. And wouldn't
you like for your home network to be private, the computer that you use
every day to do your banking online, or purchase things online with
your credit card. Wouldn't you like for that network to be private, and
nobody from the outside could get into it?
A firewall is designed to keep people on the outside from coming in on
your network, and either, number one, getting information from your
computers. Or number two, doing some damage to your computers, whether
it be through a virus, some form of spyware, or some other form of
adware or malware that they come in and try to get to your computer,
and either again, get your information or turn your computer into a bot
that can attack other computers that are under the control of the
person that infected your computer.
Even if you only have one computer at home, investing in a wired or
wireless router is a wise decision and can add another layer of
security to your home network. A router offers both added convenience
and security to your home network.
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