What is the Difference Between Wifi and Internet?

soltrana55

New member
While traveling, hotel WiFi connects instantly but emails fail to send. I honestly question What is the Difference Between Wifi and Internet during these common issues?
 
This is actually a really common confusion. WiFi is just the local wireless connection between your device and the router in the hotel. Internet is the connection that router has to the outside world. So you can have WiFi without Internet, which explains why your device says “connected” but nothing works.
 
WiFi is a wireless technology that lets devices connect to a local network without cables, while the Internet is the global network of servers and websites. WiFi provides access, but the Internet delivers online content and services worldwide.
 
WiFi is a wireless technology that connects devices to a local network, while the internet is a global system of networks providing online access. WiFi can exist without internet, but internet access usually needs WiFi or cables for home use.
 
WiFi is a wireless technology that connects devices to a local network, while the Internet is a global network of interconnected computers. WiFi provides access to the Internet, but having WiFi doesn’t guarantee Internet connectivity.
 
Wi-Fi is a wireless technology that connects devices to a local network, while the Internet is a global network of connected computers. Wi-Fi provides access to the Internet, but having Wi-Fi doesn’t guarantee an active Internet connection.
 
Wi-Fi is a wireless technology that connects devices locally to a router, while the Internet is the global network providing online access through that connection.
 
The Internet is a global network of billions of computers connected together to share data, while Wi-Fi is simply a wireless technology used to connect your devices to that local network. Think of the Internet as the water supply coming into your house through a main pipe, and Wi-Fi as the showerhead that sprays that water to your phone or laptop wirelessly. You can have a strong Wi-Fi signal but no Internet if the "main pipe" (your service provider) is down, just as you can access the Internet without Wi-Fi by using a cellular data plan or a physical Ethernet cable.
 
Wi-Fi is a wireless technology that lets devices connect to a local network, while the Internet is the global network that provides access to websites, apps, and online services.
 
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