Wi-Fi sends messages through the air using invisible waves, just like how your voice travels when you shout across a room.
Imagine you have a special radio that can send and receive messages. When you want to watch a video on your tablet, it talks to the router, which is like a smart radio in your house. The router turns the message into tiny invisible waves, kind of like ripples in a pond when you throw a stone in.
These waves travel through the air until they reach your tablet. Your tablet listens for them and changes them back into the video or game you're watching, just like how you can hear someone shouting even if they’re far away.
How the Waves Work
Think of it like sending a message with a bicycle bell. The router rings the bell (sends a wave), and your tablet hears the sound (receives the wave). But instead of a bell, Wi-Fi uses radio waves, which are much faster and can go through walls.
Every time you click on a link or scroll down a webpage, it’s like sending another message with that invisible bicycle bell, fast and fun!
Examples
- You can surf the internet on your tablet even when it's far from the router.
Ask a question
See also
- How does Wi-Fi actually transmit data through the air?
- How do Wi-Fi signals transmit data through the air?
- How does Wi-Fi transmit data wirelessly across a room?
- How does Wi-Fi transmit data wirelessly to our devices?
- How does Wi-Fi transmit data wirelessly across devices?