With these you can add a network connection anywhere in your house you have a coax cable running.
#MOCA ETHERNET TESTING TV#
The coax acts as a pass through so you can continue to use the coax cable for its initial purpose - you know cable TV or an ATSC antenna (not compatible with satellite). Each one has two coax connections and one Ethernet. You need two devices to get started, but can use up to 16. While this little box looks like a switch it's really a bridge, in fact it is a Ethernet to coax bridge. This is a new device so we think a little introduction is in order. It can be a Genie mini client connected via HDMI to a TV, or a DECA bridged TV (coax from Genie to TV DECA, then DECA ethernet to TV) 2) Activate all of your ethernet connected TVs while the coax connected. So if you're sick of trying to stream HD via Wifi and power-line technologies, you're going to really want to click through and read about how these babies work. In order to connect RVU TVs that use ethernet, the following workaround procedure must be used: 1) Activate a single client using coax.
It is a CableLabe specification that allows devices to utilize the unused bandwidth on the coax at your house to send bits where no other medium can. If you've wondered the same thing, then MoCA might just be for you. This and the fact that just about every home in America already has coax running through its walls has always made us wonder why we couldn't utilize those wires to connect our computers.
Although we were just kids when all the world's computers connected to each other via a coax cable, we still recognize the throughput potential of the medium.