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How Computers Connect to Each Other

Learn how computers send information to each other using cables, Wi-Fi, and the internet to create networks.

Age 9–12
KS2 Computing Ages 10-14
Reading level: |
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What Does It Mean for Computers to Connect?

When computers connect to each other, they share information. This might be a file you send to a friend, a video you watch online, or a message in a game. But how does your computer actually talk to another one, when they might be on opposite sides of the world?

Think of it like posting a letter. Your computer packages up information (like the letter), addresses it to another computer (like writing an address), and sends it along a route (like the postal system) to arrive safely at its destination.

Connecting with Cables

The simplest way computers connect is through cables. Ethernet cables are thick wires that plug into computers and routers. They carry electrical signals that represent dataβ€”just 1s and 0sβ€”at very high speeds. When you plug an Ethernet cable into your computer, it creates a wired connection to the internet or a local network.

These cables are reliable and super fast because the data travels through physical wires without getting interrupted by anything in the air.

Wireless Connections: Wi-Fi and Beyond

Wi-Fi lets computers connect without cables. It uses radio wavesβ€”invisible signals that travel through the airβ€”to send information between your device and a wireless router. The router is like a radio station that broadcasts your data.

Think of Wi-Fi like shouting across a playground. Your computer shouts a message, the router catches it, and sends it on to wherever it needs to go.

Networks and the Internet

When many computers connect together, they form a network. Your school might have a network connecting all the computers in your classroom. Millions of networks connect to each other through cables under the ocean and satellite signals to create the internetβ€”the world's biggest network.

Special computers called servers store information and make sure messages reach the right destination. Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are companies that connect your home to this giant network.

Why Connection Matters

Without connections, computers would be lonely machines. Connecting lets you download games, watch videos, chat with friends, and share homework files instantly across the planet!

Test yourself 🧠

This quiz is calibrated for KS2.

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