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How to secure your wifi network 530


3 Answers

✓ Accepted Answer
For beginners, I recommend starting with Python. It has clear, readable syntax that resembles plain English, which makes the learning curve much gentler than languages like C++ or Java. You'll be writing real code within hours. For web development specifically, you'll need to learn HTML and CSS first (these aren't really programming languages but are essential), then JavaScript. JavaScript is the only language that runs natively in browsers, so it's unavoidable for frontend web work. If your goal is data science or machine learning, Python is the standard. R is also used but Python's ecosystem is much larger. For mobile apps, Swift is for iOS development and Kotlin is for Android. Both are excellent. If you want one codebase for both platforms, learn React Native (JavaScript) or Flutter (Dart). My actual recommendation: pick Python if you're undecided. It's versatile, in demand, and the community is enormous.
by sandileshabalala4481
To speed up a slow Windows computer without spending money, start with these free steps: Open Task Manager (Ctrl+Shift+Esc) and check what's using your CPU and RAM. If one application is consuming everything, that's your culprit. Right-click and end task to test if it's the cause. Disable startup programs. In Task Manager click the Startup tab. Disable anything that doesn't need to launch with Windows. This alone can dramatically speed up boot time. Clear your temp files. Press Windows key + R, type %temp% and press Enter. Select all files and delete them. Empty the Recycle Bin after. If you have a traditional HDD rather than SSD, run Defragment and Optimize Drives from the Start menu. SSDs don't need this. Finally, check if your storage drive is nearly full. Windows needs at least 15% free space to operate well. Delete old files or move them to external storage if needed.
by devantealexander8660 · 2 upvotes
Start with the basics: restart both your router and the device you're trying to connect. Unplug the router for 30 seconds then plug it back in. On your device, forget the wifi network and reconnect fresh by entering the password again. This solves about 70% of wifi issues. If that doesn't work, check whether other devices can connect to the same wifi. If they can, the problem is your specific device. On Windows open Device Manager and update your network adapter driver. On a phone go to Settings > Network and reset network settings. Also check if you're connecting to the right band. Modern routers broadcast on 2.4GHz and 5GHz with similar names. The 5GHz band is faster but shorter range. Try the 2.4GHz network if you're far from the router. If nothing works, try connecting to a mobile hotspot. If that works, the problem is definitely your router settings or ISP. Log into your router admin panel (usually 192.168.1.1) and check if your device's MAC address is blocked.
by segunosei5647