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Your essential home working tech guide! – by Paul Routledge, Country Manager, D-Link

What Mobile
March 25, 2020

Who would have thought that the complex and unforeseen events of the future would lead us to a situation where many of us are going to be working from home for the best part of 2020. Many of us, particularly those for whom this will be the first time, will find it a lot harder than they expected

In theory a laptop, broadband and your phone is all you need, whilst this is a good start, you’ll quickly find yourself missing the office (trust me it’s true!). There are multiple things which will help you keep up with your demanding workloads at home. Here are a few of the most important top tech picks to make your transition from office to home as smooth as possible.

Create a workspace just for you!

When working from home on a regular basis, it’s important that you create a clear distinction between home and work life. Get up in the morning as if you are going out to work and don’t be tempted to sit sprawled on the sofa in your pyjamas. Create a dedicated working are: this could be anywhere: a spare corner in the bedroom, hallway, or Kitchen but make sure it is where you go to work (and come “home” from when you have finished work).

If you don’t have a spare room, that’s not a problem: can you build an office in your back garden instead? Sheds and shipping containers are spacious enough to house an office, without taking up too much garden space.  By creating a separate office environment, you’ll retain the professional and productive feelings you’d get in a more traditional workspace. Creating a home office will help to retain your privacy, whilst ensuring you aren’t distracted. Especially with kids off school!

Get great WiFi

Most devices now connect wirelessly; your whole experience working from home could depend on your Wi-Fi performance. Imagine if everyone in your family is on a device, all competing on one network, this can cause internal traffic issues and downgrade performance. Look for a router with Mu-MiMO technology, basically this will allow you to have multiple user’s receiving data streams at the same time. Also, did you know that you can assign bandwidth priority on your router? Basically allowing specific devices be prioritised on your network, whether connected by wireless or physical cables, so by prioritising your work machine through working hours you won’t have to compete with the rest of the family, a must if your work involves video conferencing.

Also, did you know that you can assign bandwidth priority on your router? Basically allow specific devices to take more of the available Wi-Fi signal, so by prioritising your work machine through working hours you won’t have to compete with the rest of the family, a must if your work involves video conferencing.

As a final note, think about a wired connection, which will always provide a better more stable broadband connection, but you can’t always be close to your router or run cables across your house!

Do you have a plan for if your router goes down? Everything in your home office ecosystem will lose connectivity, and there is nothing more frustrating! More of that later.

Try MESH

If the space you are converting into your home office is a significant distance away from your router, your connection could be limited to low speeds. Rather than having one router serving up Wi-Fi your entire home, a mesh network router will extend your coverage. Strategic placement of your hubs is very important, to ensure you blanket all the rooms in your home with the wireless internet connectivity you need, doing away with dreaded deadzones. Many products now on the market can be used outdoors and will easily extend the WiFi to reach your garden office!

Try a 4G dongle for remote working

Mobile routers use a cellular Internet connection to give you a simple and fast Wi-Fi network anywhere you need one. It is also a failover solution for if your main broadband connection goes down, or another solution to the problem of competing for Wi-Fi signal; your 4G router could be used exclusively for work.

On a final note you could even take your 4G router and work in the garden (British weather permitting).

Get a USB hub for multiple home and work devices

To fully create the home working environment, a USB hub/docking station is essential. Connections to your monitor, printer, webcam or home network can all be secured using these small, simple devices.

Anyone who juggles between charging multiple devices, or has multiple devices to charge at once, should consider a USB hub as part of their home office set up. Some have up to 7 USB ports so you can charge your phone, speakers, Fitbit, fan AND the all-important coffee warmer right on your desk. Voila!

More and more staff and companies are embracing working from home, cutting down on commuting time, costs and stress. But does it achieve the same results as working in the office? 

New research by YouGov Omnibus reveals that a fifth (20%) of HR managers believe that staff work to a slightly higher standard at home than they do in the office, and a further 7% believe they work to a “much higher” standard.

While we wish we could change the circumstances we find ourselves in, perhaps remote, flexible and home working is the sensible step forward and the real future of work.

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