As I started building my home network with more and more devices, I had to give careful thought to the placement of each part of it. I made many mistakes along the way. Some were completely preventable and could have been mitigated with a little more foresight. I couldn’t see the others coming, but the good news is that you, the reader, can learn from these 5 choices that I regretted making during my installation. home network.
Not setting up the mesh network sooner
Better than the alternatives
Wireless networking can be a challenge, especially if your space is large. Connecting to something like a multi-story family home can be difficult, but it’s even worse if you completely ignore the mesh network option. When I was building my home network, I plunked down some cash on a fancy router that promised great range for a home in my size, but it couldn’t be further from the truth. Even with the extenders, my house had huge dead zones and I had to constantly plan which areas to cover. Finally, I caved and applied the correct grid mesh that I should have in the first place.
The difference was night and day. Suddenly I had great signal and speed in all areas of my house, having everything under one SSID eliminated the confusion of visiting family or friends. If you’re on the fence about whether you need a mesh network, you probably need one.
Jump on UPS
Just don’t do it
You’d think that after living in a place with constant thunderstorms and occasionally losing electronics to power surges, I’d learn and buy a UPS once I get the funds for my equipment. No. It was foolish to switch to UPS for such a long time after moving away from a place with changeable weather.
I had a power surge at my house and while most of my equipment was fine, it killed a few things that had nothing to do with a proper surge protector and some data became unrecoverable on my home server. A UPS could prevent data loss, and if all my critical equipment was connected to it, I wouldn’t lose anything.
Port bandwidth mismatch
I wasn’t getting the most out of my equipment
Having a Gigabit Internet connection is awesome. It’s truly one of the best quality-of-life improvements I’ve made to my home network, but getting gigabit speeds on my main desktop was no problem with its integrated NIC. The rest of my network didn’t have the necessary hardware to transmit at those speeds, so as I kept adding a link here, an old server, the speeds on my local network were slower than normal. Changing cables (including the painful job of changing wall outlets) and older hardware allowed me to have anywhere from 1-2.5 Gbps connections.
It’s time for the hardware industry to switch to 1 Gigabit Ethernet
Whether you’re a home lab enthusiast or a casual media server owner, you’re probably already familiar with the outdated speeds of 1GbE connections. Most HDDs can throttle a 1 Gigabit connection, and that’s before considering complex RAID configurations and blazing fast SSDs. Likewise, if you stream games or movies on your local server, switching to a 2.5GbE (or ideally 5Gbe) connection will provide a more responsive experience. I hope that 2025 will be the year that motherboard, mini-PC and SBC manufacturers finally move away from the 1 Gigabit standard.
Very early upgrade to Wi-Fi 7
Not enough support yet
This may be a regret that most of you don’t carry, but when I bought a shiny new Wi-Fi 7 mesh network package, I paid a hefty premium for it. I didn’t even think about it at the time. I thought I would use that 6 GHz band a lot and enjoy those blazing fast wireless speeds. One thing I didn’t fully consider was that only the iPhone 16 Pro could reach those speeds. The rest of the equipment in my house couldn’t keep up, and as a result, I could probably save quite a bit of money by waiting or going for a Wi-Fi 6 setup.
Don’t take the time to manage cable from the start
The longer you wait, the more painful it gets
Probably my biggest regret from my home networking journey was waiting until the end to consider cable management. Now, of course no one is going to take the time to run the cables nice and neat, let alone see that everything is working properly. It’s like attaching the side panels to a newly built PC and screwing them up before it even starts. Not only do you not want this bad juju, especially for things like home networking, it’s just a bad experience.
Instead of actually dealing with cable management, I let the problem slide and as I continued to add more devices that required a cable connection, it went from a manageable task to one that would take hours. Once you’ve built a rat’s nest of cables, it’s almost impossible to properly manage it without taking things apart. This causes interruptions and even more headaches. Don’t do what I did, just plan out your cable runs and clean them up as soon as you have everything working, so it’s not a hair-raising experience when you add devices later.
Mistakes are part of the learning process
Setting up a home network can be a complex and laborious process and prone to mistakes when purchasing. placement of equipment it can be frustrating, but like any piece of technology, it’s an important part of the learning process. In the end, as long as there is reliable network it’s relatively easy to maintain and meets your needs, that’s what matters.





