5

What happens when connected to two networks at same time, using two different wireless network connections and/or two different wireless network adapters?

Conflict? Or does the stronger connection take charge? Or do they enhance one another? (Example: I have a TP-link booster adapter, which I can plug in via USB and connect, which shows up as a second 'wireless network connection' in my Network Connections. Sometimes the first will pick up one wireless signal from nearby, but the TP-link will pick up another, from a different router/network.)

Can anyone explain in extreeeemely simple terms, to someone who is super bewildered by the concepts of how internet connections work? I wish to know whether I should worry about disabling one if using the other, and all that sort of configuring...

Windows XP Pro home edition

1
  • 1
    TLDR: No benefit no harm. You can have them both running although wired connection will be prefered by the system. WIFI card will only use battery as far as i know. There are ways to use them both to load balance the network traffic and speedup your connection (bandwidth) but not out of the box and definitely more advanced as a task.
    – mnmnc
    Jun 7, 2015 at 10:43

1 Answer 1

3

Simple Explanation:

Your computer will be fine if you have multiple internet connections from multiple network adapters. So long as you aren't using both to connect to the same network, you should be fine.

Windows will automatically determine which internet connection to send traffic to, and will typically use that same connection so long as it's available. If you're only browsing the internet and not running a server or something, you shouldn't see any negative effects from the dual connections.

More Technical Explanation:

You can have multiple network connections active at the same time. The network connection that you use first is defined by the routing table. You can see this by opening a command prompt (cmd.exe) and running route print.

For example:

IPv4 Route Table
===========================================================================
Active Routes:
Network Destination        Netmask          Gateway       Interface  Metric
      0.0.0.0          0.0.0.0         10.0.2.2        10.0.2.15     10
      0.0.0.0          0.0.0.0         10.0.1.1        10.0.1.15     20

The first route will be used for your traffic to the internet (0.0.0.0/0) because the Metric is lower. You can modify the routing table if you want to specify which network to use.

Side Note: You should totally upgrade from XP to something newer if at all possible. Also, Pro and Home are mutually exclusive :)

1
  • Can people on one network see things on the other network? Or does that only happen when I create a "bridge"? Can I connect an old XP machine to a new machine by their own network and keep it isolated from the main network/Internet?
    – endolith
    Nov 1, 2016 at 16:46

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .