Lenovo s850 roaming signal in home network

hi,
i have purchase lenovo s850 just 2 days back...
but i don't know why my phone is showing roaming signal even in home network...
how can i resolve this issue
2. how to change color of backlit or from where i can change the setting of backlit

can any one reply

Similar Messages

  • Lenovo s820 Signal lost and often shows Roaming even in Home network

    Hi,
    From past 1month I am facing issue with the signal strength and calls automatically get disconnected while talking and it often shows roaming even though I am at the Home network. Pls help.
    Earlier I thought the issue is with the network provider but later I found that the SIM works good in other Phones issue is with my Lenovo S820.
    My Version information:
    Model Number : Lenovo S820
    Android Version: 4.4.2
    Baseband Version: S820.ROW.V104, 2014/11/21 10:59
    Build Number: S820_ROW_8G_S222_141121

    can any one reply

  • Repeated lost of AirPort Express signal on home network w/ Mac and Dell PC

    After a year of steady, reliable home wireless network access with an AirPort Extreme base station and an Express relay in the upstairs, I am suddenly, repeatedly losing signal strength from the Express relay. The Express goes into a flashing amber status when the problem occurs. To solve the issue, I have successfully been able to restart the Express, which works for 12 to 36 hours before the situation happens again. What could have happened to cause this sudden recurring problem and what can be done to resolve it longer term?

    Hello kkinva. Welcome to the Apple Discussions!
    It is very possible that you may have some form of Wi-Fi interference that has been introduced recently in the immediate area that is preventing you from getting a good clean signal between the base stations.
    I suggest you perform a simple site survey, using utilities like MacStumbler or iStumbler to determine potential areas of interference, and then, try to either eliminate or significantly reduce them where possible.

  • Connected to home network, but cannot access internet on ipad

    I have got strong signal on home network but cannot access the internet. Tried resets, etc

    It could be a simple problem that needs a reset for the related devices. Other than that, try to control the security settings and passwords of your home network. You might be using WEP password protocol to connect your home network. Try to use WPA protocol instead of WEP. Maybe it will help to solve your problem.

  • Can I configure a wireless home network with two cable routers (both with separate connections to the same cable company)?  Issue is poor signal strength even with multiple Airport Expresses added to the network.

    I have a wireless home network consisting of a time capsule, two airport expresses and a cable modem.  Even with this configuration I get a very weak signal in much of be condo - the walls, etc. are solid concrete. I want to see if I can add another separately connected cable modem and connect one of the existing airport express to it by Ethernet cable.  If so, this would give me two wired hubs and greatly improve signal strength. I do not know if this configuration will in fact work or if I will just wind up with two, separate and unrelateable networks.  Unfortunately, there is no way to run any additional Ethernet cable and I doubt simply adding more Airport Express will help. Thanks.

    Try Ethernet over Power adapters.. these are very popular for your kind of environment.. being able to make non-wireless link to another area where you can setup a wireless access point.
    Airport Express are not great for wireless power.. if you really have issues with wireless strength in a bad environment apple stuff is not the way to go.
    The comparison chart here.
    http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/lanwan/router-charts/bar/58-2_4-ghz-dn?see=P_F
    This is their worst test location you can also see averages.. the latest airport extreme.. is there a long way down.. and that is a much better wireless device than Airport Express.
    The Ubiquiti power AP is small cheap and designed for precisely this duty.. useless in an apple wireless network.. you will need to run ethernet or EOP adapters back to the main router.. but if the normal omni directional antennas don't provide enough signal you can get directional ones.. I suspect you can cover your whole apartment with a pair of these and high gain directional antenna.

  • I found a wifi network called linksys and it let me connect to the network for a while but now it wont let me. it says that the ipad 2 is unable to connect and we have tried to connect to the home network and it didnt pick up the signal.

    but my laptop will. so my grandson restarted the home network and the ipad 2 still wont pick it up. but my laptop will pick the home network.

    Start here.
    http://www.apple.com/support/ipad/assistant/wifi/
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1398

  • Advice on improving wireless home network

    Hello,
    I've got a wireless home network set up, but it isn't performing as well as I would like. I have 2 computers I want using the network, 1 powerbook G4 and 1 sony vaio. I purchased a time machine with built in airport extreme (5Gz N) as my base station. I've also purchased 2 airport extremes to extend my network and add a printer to the network. Now, I want to try to improve my performance.
    I have a 3 story house. The time capsule is hooked up to the cable modem in the garage, on the east end of the house. I put 1 AE in the 3rd story office on the east end of the house and hooked up my printer. I put the other AE in my 3rd story bedroom on the west end of the house. Although both AE's do extend the signal a bit, it's not by much.
    Before wifi became popular, the previous owner of the house (my father in law) installed an ethernet network throughout the house. The hub is in the garage, which is why the cable modem is hooked up down there.
    Now, what would be the best and quickest way to improve my wifi coverage and bandwidth throughout the house, especially in that bedroom on the west end. Should I moved the time capsule out of the basement? Does being down there weaken the coverage? Can I connect my time capsule to my cable modem through the ethernet network?
    Or am I just expecting too much from these devices?
    Also, I assume I'm only using the 2.4 Ghz spectrum, since my computer's airport card is a little too old to take advantage of the 5 Ghz spectrum, or am I miss understanding something?
    Any advice would be appreciated.
    Thanks!

    Now, what would be the best and quickest way to improve my wifi coverage and bandwidth throughout the house, especially in that bedroom on the west end. Should I moved the time capsule out of the basement? Does being down there weaken the coverage? Can I connect my time capsule to my cable modem through the ethernet network?
    Yes, for the best overall bandwidth performance, you will want to take advantage of the Ethernet backbone. What you will want to do, in this case, it to create a "roaming" network with each of the base stations connected to this backbone.
    Where you place the base stations will depend on where there will be Ethernet jacks available.
    If possible, I would suggest the following:
    o Leave the Time Capsule (TC) connected to the modem and run an Ethernet patch cable from one of its available LAN ports to the Ethernet jack.
    o If you will be doing most of your computing on the third floor, place the AirPort Extreme Base Stations (AEBSn)at both ends and (of course) where there are Ethernet jacks available. Connect an Ethernet patch cord between the jack and the WAN port of the AEBSn.
    Both AEBSns will need to be reconfigured as bridges as you will want the TC to be the main router providing both NAT & DHCP services for the entire network. Use the same Network Name for each base station, but be sure to use a different radio channel to prevent interference.
    Also, I assume I'm only using the 2.4 Ghz spectrum, since my computer's airport card is a little too old to take advantage of the 5 Ghz spectrum, or am I miss understanding something?
    If you can provide me with the exact Machine ID for your Mac, I can let you know if its supports 802.11a ... which operates on the 5 GHz band. You can find this through the System Profiler. It would be something like PowerBook2,1.
    You will have a number of options here, depending on the exact models of your base stations. Are any or all of them the simultaneous dual-band versions?

  • What do I need to extend my home network?

    I want to extend the range and services of my existing home network.
    It is wired on the first floor from the cable modem to a Cisco 4-port BEFSR41 router to a hub feeding a micro cell, several Windows boxes, a Roku2 box and an NAS.
    One of the router ports feeds a  Netgear Wireless-N Access Point WN802T v2 mounted near the first floor ceiling.
    That feeds enough signal through to the second floor but it's somewhat weak at the farthest rooms.
    The wife won't let me run cat5e between floors or open up walls.
    If I put an Airport Express box of some sort on the second floor above the WAP would the two talk to each other and extend my range out across the second floor (and provide print server functions as well)?
    Can I then roam on both floors with her win7 laptop and my iPad seamlessly?
    Once upton a time I could spell computer. I'm not sure anymore.
    Any help at all would be appreciated. Thanks

    If I put an Airport Express box of some sort on the second floor above the WAP would the two talk to each other and extend my range out across the second floor (and provide print server functions as well)?
    Can I then roam on both floors with her win7 laptop and my iPad seamlessly?
    It won't work.. Apple routers are for apple.. it uses proprietary configuration and settings for extend wireless.. so it simply will not work.
    You would do better with a second WN802T if it has a repeater mode.. Always try and stick to same equipment.. since apple is not unique in only allowing repeater to its own brand.. the fact is that there is no proper standards.. each one did what was right in his own eyes.. hence chaos.
    You can also do it the other way around.. replace the WN802T with an Apple router.. eg a second hand Extreme.. which are a good buy for gen4 or gen5 now.. $60-70 gets you in.. with either a second extreme or an express as the extender. Then you can roam. Seamless that is another question.. Nothing in the wireless world works seamless.. that is too much to expect.

  • Need help choosing how to extend my existing home network to my detached garage?

    I have done as much research as possible on this scenario but cannot seem to match the ideal solution with my wants.  Perhaps I simply just do not understand networking as well as I thought I did.  Either way, any helpful information or suggestions are greatly appreciated.
    Objective:  Extend my wireless network to my detached garage.
    My current ISP provider is Time Warner Cable.  I have RoadRunner Extreme, which in my area gives consistent speeds of 50 Mbps download and 5 Mbps upload when I am connected via ethernet cable.  When I upgraded to the "Extreme" package i found out I was forced to use their Motorola SB6580 ... its a DOCSIS 3.0 cable modem + wireless router.  I was able to access the Motorola's setup options on the internet and I disabled the wireless function.  This has allowed me to use my Time Capsule as the primary router to provide wireless access on my home network.  I have not had any issues with this setup and is my preferred way to operate.
    I have recently moved my home office to the 2nd story of my detached garage and need to extend my wireless network to meet the demands of all my gear.  I have decided to achieve this goal by going with one of the following 3 options:
    1.)  enable the wireless function on the motorola modem making it the primary router.  move my time capsule out to the office and use it in bridge mode.  However I do not think I understand bridge mode correctly.  I thought the secondary router (in this case my TC) in bridge mode needed to be connected w/ an ethernet cable at all times to enable this feature?  If I understand similar networking discussions I will lose the ethernet ports with this option?  If this isnt called Bridge mode once i take away the ethernet cable what is it "technically" called?
    2.)  buy a 2nd airport extreme base station and create the same type of wireless network extension setup.  The difference here is I would leave my motorola's wireless features disabled, use 2 apple products that speak apples to apples wirelessly and relieve myself of all the headaches involved with a neopolitan setup.  This seems like the obvious choice b/c Apple products are much more user friendly, but I dont want to spend the $200 on a new router if I can achieve a comparable setup by just enabling the equipment I already have. 
    3.)  use either of these 2 scenarios above & go buy a 150' ethernet cable to join them together.  if this is the case wouldnt a $50 hub suffice on the end of the cable?  I dont necessarily need to have wireless, just reliable connectivity.  I can access the existing wireless network now, but download speeds are not great and things really start to slow down when i have multiple clients connected.  I would rather not have to drill through exterior walls, bury conduit and install learn how to install data wall plates, but i will if this is the pros far out way the cons.
    Current modem/router placement:  if standing @ the front door of my 1 story house facing out towards the street my motorola modem/router is in the front right-hand corner of the house.
    Distance location of the detached garage office setup:  if standing @ my front door my my work area is in the far back left corner of my property.  it is approx 175' from the router and on the 2nd story of the garage.  I said 150' cable earlier b/c i could relocate the router to a bedroom on the opposite end of the house, however this would eleminate the current wired status of the items connected to it and I would prefer to keep them wired in.
    clients connected in the house: (4) apple tv's; Roku; Xbox; Wii; Playstation 3; (2) Lenovo laptops; iPad; (2) Blackberry's; (2) iPhones; iPod touch; (2) wireless netowrk printers; (2) smart tv's ... a handful of these are currently wired into the time capsule now which provides an uninterupted viwing experience for the MLB package.  This of course trumps all opportunity costs involved with moving the router.  There is nothing more frustrating than a screen buffering in the botton of the 9th inning after you've sat there for 3 hours.
    clients connected in the office: (2) 27" imacs; apple tv; iPad; network printer; Wii; Harmony Link universal remote; Mac Book Pro ...
    I have approx 5TB of digital media that is shared over the network via shared iTunes libraries that I would like to access as well.  iCloud helps with all of our household gadgets as far as acessibility but with all the backups going on simutaneously it also creates headaches when you need the throughput.  I need to do a better job of managing those settings.  nonetheless, I would like some guidance on the best way to extend my current netowrk, suggestions for better scenarios i did not mention and thus am probably not aware of and any networking 101 schooling if it doesnt sound like i understand the way bridge mode/network extension works.  sorry for the long post and thank you for your time & help.

    Ethernet beats all other solutions hands down..
    A single ethernet connection from wherever is the closest point in the house to the garage office... wins. You can plug a router working as AP and switch or pure switch on to it. Get a cabler in to do the job.. and they can probably figure it out and do the whole job whilst you scatch your head.. yes you will pay for it.. but a cabler knows how to do it. And most likely leave the inside network exactly as it is. Since office is important to be reliable.. there is one and one only reliable method.. ethernet.
    If the garage and house are on one electrical circuit.. which is doubtful if it is a separate building then EOP adapters can often work well.. They do not handle earth leakage protection, breakers (rather than fuses) or meters at all well.. but if they are simply all connected to power.. behind the same meter and using old fashioned fuse box.. EOP rated at 200mbps or some now are 500mbps can work reasonably well. Speed about the same as wireless at its best but if it works when installed will generally not change with the weather, moon, and wind direction which wireless is liable to do.
    Wireless bridging.. hmm avoid if possible. For reliable connection no.. apple products can do wireless repeater but as you mentioned that turns off the ethernet ports except for the Express.. that is the only unit you can use as a bridge and plug a switch into it. Why Apple why??
    So if you want to bridge two points by wireless buy specialised wireless bridge.. that means an AP in the house plugged into the existing network.. and AP unit perhaps on the outside of the garage.. or in windows if you have a window in the house that looks at a window in your office. Look at products from companies like ubiquiti.. they are not too expensive but professional equipment and designed for precisely this kind of work.
    Hence the reliability is dramatically better than domestic stuff.. and will require a lot less work to maintain the link.
    Conclusion.. wire it.
    Unless you rent the house.. an investment in ethernet cabling install once properly and forget .. beats every other solution even if it costs x5 as other solutions.

  • I'm looking for some help connecting linksys IP Cameras to my home network to monitor my property when I'm travelling. I used to do this with linksys WAPS, but since I've discarded all my old linksys networking and standardized on airport, I can't get the

    I'm looking for some help connecting linksys IP Cameras to my home network to monitor my property when I'm travelling.  I used to do this with linksys WAPS, but since I've discarded all my old linksys networking and standardized on airport, I can't get these things working.  I know that I have to identify my camera through the DHCP table and set up port forwarding and there is the problem. 
    My network consists of 4  base stations set up in a roaming network - same network name and passwords.  I need to do it this way so I don't have to switch network when I move from one side of the house to the other, go to the cabana, or my shop in the barn.  The network works pretty well since I went to a roaming set up.  Good performance, yata, yata, yata.
    However, the roaming network requires the AEBS's to be set up in bridge mode, rather than sharing an ip address.  When the AEBS is set to  bridge mode, you don't see a DCHP table or have the ability to identify your IP Cam through the AEBS - and hence, no port forwarding. 
    I am able to identify and set up my Linksys IP Cam by locating the ip address on my FIOS router, even though, it's plugged into an AEBS.  I set it up, see the video, remove the ethernet cable from the IP Cam, restart - and I can't get to it from an AEBS.  In researching this, it appears, I should be setting up the AEBS to "share an IP Address", going to the DHCP table and identifying the camera's IP address and setting up port forwarding.  However, you don't see any of the DHCP or port forwarding options in Airport Network Utility when configuring in bridge mode. 
    I'm hoping I'm missing something here and that the solution isn't to set it up at the FIOS router level, but I'm beginning to think that's my only hope.  What concerns me there is that I should be able to see the IP cam on the network without port forwarding since I'm not coming from outside, and I can't even do this unless it's connected hard wire.
    I'd appreciate any insight into this that anyone might have.  I've hit the wall with what I know.
    Thanks.

    In a roaming network, your "main" router is the device that would require port mapping/forwarding to be configured in order to access the IP camera from the Internet. This router is also the one that would be provide the private IP address for the camera which you will want to be a static one.
    So as you described your network, the IP cameras should be getting an IP address or you assigned it a static one and this is the address that you would enter in the Private IP address (or equivalent depending on the router used) field when setting up port mapping.
    If you are not able to access this camera from the local network, then this should be troubleshot first.

  • IPod touch not working with home network?

    I know this question has been brought up dozens of times before, but I couldn't find a working solution in any other posts so allow me to explain my situation.
    I got my touch a few months ago, it was working fine with my unsecured home network. Now, the ipod claims that is connected to my network, however it will not load webpages or anything else that might make it seem like it has an internet connection. When I go to Safari, the page attempts to load for what seems like forever and then comes up with the same message everytime claiming that the server has stopped responding or that the server cannot be found. It does, however, work perfectly with the free Wi-Fi hotspots that I connect with in businesses with no problems at all.
    I have tried:
    Resetting Network Settings
    Resetting iPod (factory restore)
    Resetting my router
    Renewing the Lease on my iPod network connection
    Turning the iPod's Wi-Fi on and off
    Turning the iPod off and back on
    Changing the DNS number to (4.2.2.2,4.2.2.3.)
    I'm not sure if this is significant, but when I am "connected" to my network according to my iPod, it says I have full signal. When I am disconnected and my default network is just on the list of networks, it says that there are only two bars of signal strength.
    Please help, I don't know what is wrong with this thing.

    Have you updated your router firmware lately? If not, please do so.
    DNS is usually provided by your ISP. I would use that unless your other devices can't reach the network either. A good alternative is OpenDNS which you can find out about at opendns.com.
    When you think you are connected, tap Settings > WiFi > then the little blue > next to your network name. What type of IP address are you seeing? If you see that your IP address starts with 164, then you really are not connecting to your network.
    You might want to look at a couple of router settings. What is DHCP set to? (this issues your IP address) and What is MAC address filtering set to? (if this is on and your iPod MAC address has not been entered into the router table, you will not connect). DHCP should be on, MAC address filtering off. Additionally, look at what your default DNS is set to. Most routers have a box to check saying "Use ISP" for DNS.

  • Why can I connect to my home network with my iPhone 5 in one room, but when I move to another it is 'unable to connect to the network'

    At home, I can connect my iPhone 5 to my home wifi network with no problems, as long as I stay downstairs.
    As soon as I go upstairs my phone disconnects from the network. I can still see the home network it in the available network lists (with full signal strength), but when I try to reconnect I get an 'unable to connect to the network message'
    If I move back downstairs it reconnects
    This has only started happening in the past week or so
    I've tried to forget and rejoin the network, but this doesn't work
    I reset my network settings on the phone. This worked for a couple of hours and I could connect to the wifi upstairs, but now it won't connect again.
    Does anyone have any ideas what is causing this?

    Sounds like your wi-fi signal strength has degraded.  Try rebooting your wi-fi router, or get it serviced.
    Do you have similar issues with any other wi-fi routers?

  • IPod Touch only connects to home network; not Airport, Starbucks, Panera...

    Before I start, I've read the FAQs and have looked through a number of topics already posted.
    I seem to have the opposite problem everyone else is having. My iPod Touch connects just fine to my home wireless... It connects and I'm able to browse the internet, download apps, etc without fail.
    However, when I was at the airport recently (both St. Louis and Dallas/Ft. Worth), my Touch would "connect" to the wireless there, but I couldn't go on the 'net or get new apps, etc. It was behaving as if I wasn't at a location with wireless access. When I returned home, I went to Starbucks, Panera, McDonald's... several places with free, open, easy-to-connect WiFi (and took my laptop to make sure that their wireless was working), and had the same problems as I did at the airport.
    Considering the best part of having wireless on the Touch is that you should be able to access it anywhere with WiFi, it seems kind of "useless" to have it only work at home (I have two computers at home; so it's not like I need to use the Touch for internet there).
    Any thoughts? Obviously, the whole "check your router settings" / "reset your router" answers are not going to help me, as I have no control over those, nor can I see them at these places. Help would be greatly appreciated!

    I'm having the same problem. My iPod Touch connects to my home network and another secure network for which I enter the network name and password. However I am unable to connect to any free WiFi, even when my laptop can access it with no problem. The signal is apparently strong; I can see all the bars on the upper left, but when trying to connect to Safari or the app store it says that there is no connection.

  • I just got a new itouch and i can't get imessage or facetime to work on my home network

    I just got a new itouch 4 and i can't get imessage and facetime to work on my home wifi network (Airport Express). I can't explain it. The itouch works fine otherwise uncluding the internet. Facetime and imessage work at the apple store so there must be something wrong with my home network. Please help if you can!
    iPod touch, iOS 5.0.1

    I changed the DNS to 8.8.8.8 as you suggested with no success, I even tried 8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4 as suggested by others with no success either.  When I try and activate iMessage or Facetime, I still get the same message "could not sign in, please check your network connection".  The internet and Mail work perfectly fine on the iPod touch so the WiFi signal IS going through.  I am at a loss, any other suggestions would be more than welcome. Thanks!

  • Need advice on airport set up (home network)

    hi all,
    i am just wondering what the best set up would be for my home network, listed below are what i have set up, and what i think could be the best setup
    i have an office upstairs which contains:
    -ADSL2 modem
    -iMac 802.11n
    -PC wired
    -printer
    -750GB LaCie HDD
    i have my lounge room which is downstairs and almost below the office. (in case it matters) the office is above my garage – which is next to my lounge room. so the airport will be going through the floor & my brick garage wall.
    in my lounge i have:
    -macbook 802.11n
    -iphone x 2 802.11g
    -xbox 360 (currently have wireless adapter but i think ill sell it due to speed/depending on the setup i go with)
    i am concerned because i need to have the network G for my iphones and depending on how i set up my 360.
    i want to stream HD media to my 360 from my imac (through connect 360) and i have not been able to watch it yet as i lag every 30-40 seconds watching lost in HD. (that was using the faulty netgear DG834N modem/router which i have just sent back to netgear/supplier for a refund).
    now after discovering i can use an apple airport extreme and express together i figured i could do either one of two things:
    -have an extreme wired to the 360 downstairs( utilizing really only 1 port), have the HDD connected to the extreme (i figure if its connected via ethernet to the extreme, even though the imac is wireless, being connected to the source (extreme + hdd) i shouldn't get lag watching HD or using the 360 online.
    Then the express is upstairs in the office where the modem plugs into the express and the express shares the network to the extreme.
    now with this method i figure i can have an 802.11n (b/g compatible) network and all my devices can run off it. (don't need pure N as the 360 is connected via ethernet)
    because the printer is in the office i would set the printer up to be shared via the imac and the laptop could just use the shared printer (i don't print too often). id prolly have to buy a wireless adapter for the dell but i could also share the network via ethernet to from the imac.
    the 2nd:
    - the extreme is upstairs with the modem connecting to the imac, PC, HDD and printer wired.
    the airport express is downstairs with the xbox 360 (im assuming the ethernet port can send info and not just receive packets). this way the modems are linked up and (i hope) the network is running at 5Ghz so its fastest possible for streaming HD/SD media.
    running this method i would need to set the imac up to host a G network for the iphones as they don't support N.
    the laptop can connect wirelessly.
    now i have only just discovered you can make a WDS using an extreme and express. so im sorry if ive gotten anything wrong, i have been using my netgear router and to date it has SUCKED!
    a couple of questions:
    is the express slower than the extreme, does it have gigabit ethernet and is the express going to lag being rougly 2 walls, 8-10 metres (in a direct line) from the express?
    if i were just to keep my current xbox 360 wireless device, would it suffice for streaming SD/HD media?
    now i am looking in the future at getting another hard drive (500-750GB) would i be best to get a time capsule or just sticking with the extreme? can the time capsule rout/network as good as the extreme?
    and now, for my final question, i have a friend 10 townhouses, 5-6 real houses down (if i had to guess he'd be 100 metres from my place). if he were to get an extreme, could he use my internet/connect to my network?
    i appreciate anyone helping me, i know its a long read but i just don't want to overdo it, also i don't want to be lagged if i feel like playing some multiplayer halo3/GTA IV or want to watch HD/SD media.
    thanks guys

    -have an extreme wired to the 360 downstairs( utilizing really only 1 port), have the HDD connected to the extreme (i figure if its connected via ethernet to the extreme, even though the imac is wireless, being connected to the source (extreme + hdd) i shouldn't get lag watching HD or using the 360 online.
    Then the express is upstairs in the office where the modem plugs into the express and the express shares the network to the extreme.
    now with this method i figure i can have an 802.11n (b/g compatible) network and all my devices can run off it. (don't need pure N as the 360 is connected via ethernet)
    because the printer is in the office i would set the printer up to be shared via the imac and the laptop could just use the shared printer (i don't print too often). id prolly have to buy a wireless adapter for the dell but i could also share the network via ethernet to from the imac.
    That is a possibility. However you may find that the wireless signal can not penetrate the 2 walls and still be usable. You will only know by trying it.
    the 2nd:
    * the extreme is upstairs with the modem connecting to the imac, PC, HDD and printer wired.
    the airport express is downstairs with the xbox 360 (im assuming the ethernet port can send info and not just receive packets). this way the modems are linked up and (i hope) the network is running at 5Ghz so its fastest possible for streaming HD/SD media.
    running this method i would need to set the imac up to host a G network for the iphones as they don't support N.
    the laptop can connect wirelessly.
    The iMac would NOT be able to host a G network of the iPhone. The iMac would need to be connected wirelessly to the signal provided by the AirPort Extreme base station (AEBS). It can't connect to a wireless network as a client AND host a wireless network at the same time.

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