Q We have a cable modem for Internet service in our home, and use a wired router to connect PCs in four different rooms. My wife wants Wi-Fi so she can wirelessly download books to her Kindle e-reader. How can we get Wi-Fi in our hard-wired house?
ROGER ROBINSON, CAMBRIA, CALIF.
A You can have a combined wired and wireless home network. But you'll need to buy a wireless router ($35 to $100 at any computer store) to replace your wired router.
The wireless router can provide wireless Internet service for your wife's Kindle while offering you plug-in Ethernet cable connections for your existing wired computers.
Just be sure to buy a wireless router with four Ethernet ports to plug in your four wired computers. If you ever have more computers than there are Ethernet ports on the wireless router, you can buy a Wi-Fi adapter -- $15 to $60 -- for the extra computer.
For product reviews of some wireless routers, see www.startribune.com/a825.
For product reviews of some Wi-Fi adapters, see www.startribune.com/a826.
Q I have data on some 1990s-era Apple Macintosh 3.5 inch, double-sided, high-density floppy disks that I would like transferred to CDs.