Can also blend it in with something like this: One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - CMC-03 Cord Cover Wall Cable Management System - 125" Cable Hider Raceway Kit for a Power Cord, Ethernet Cable, Speaker Wire - 8X L15.6in, W0.59in H0.39in, White https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_GKoEDbCEG26T6
Everyone do themselves a favor and get these.
I also adhere the power strip to the back of the tv or tv stand. Keeps everything hidden and off the floor.
Link to diffuser channels? I’ve used these in the past and they look sharp.
Limited-time deal: One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - CMC-03 Cord Cover Wall Cable Management System - 125" Cable Hider Raceway Kit for a Power Cord, Ethernet Cable, Speaker Wire - 8X L15.7in, W0.59in H0.4in, White https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_FN5XMJYSZHX0HM0CW0DV?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
I use a hard plastic cord cover system that sticks onto the wall and have had super good success so far! It was definitely se work to put it together but no snipped cords. This is the one I got but there are a lot like it to choose from.
To get to the back wall I'd just get something like this.
Run the wire up along the side of the window behind the curtain, then to the back right along the corner of your ceiling dropdown.
Looks great! If you ever wanted to hide all those cords I got these from Amazon for like 10 bucks and used them in multiple rooms
I was kinda thinking something plastic like this.
Cats will go out of their way to play with netting lmao if she wants to play with the cords, she'll probably wanna play with the netted cords even more.
These plastic covers can be placed on the wall, under furniture, on the ground, really anywhere. It's super helpful.
You can get fairly inexpensive cable channels that will blend in with the wall. They'll achieve a similar look but you'll obviously just have the channel showing. [Here's an example)(https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF)
Get something like this Limited-time deal: 125" Cord Hider - Yecaye One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - Cord Cover Wall - Easy Install Cable Management System for Small 1-2 Wires - Cable Raceway Kit Home Office - 8X L15.7 W0.59 H0.4, CMC03 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_dl_XXD8AZTVP96M15QZNBNC
I ran a cable raceway/track along the baseboard on the left. I found them on Amazon and they worked great!
I’m very meticulous, so I spent time making sure each section was flush. The finished product is amazing. They blend in perfectly with the white based board and they’re paintable, so you could use them with practically any color choice.
The high-effort option would be to drill into the drywall and run the cables through the back side. A simpler option would be to get some sticky cable channels like these and use them to hide the cables. You could even paint the channels the same color as the wall so they blend in better.
If you want to go through the attic, which I think is a solid plan, you can consider using painted raceway to get it to the ceiling in that "front room." If you can you can get a PoE powered access point, that will power off the switch and ethernet cable, then drill a small hole in the ceiling, terminate the end of the cable with an rj45 jack and mount an AP on the ceiling.
Also you can probably find a wiring tech to do this for you if you need help or just don't want to deal with it.
I've been happy with these cable concealers. Also just a tip, don't mount the rear speakers too high. They should be just above head level.
125" Cord Hider - One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - Cord Cover Wall - Easy Install Cable Management System Home Office - Cable Hider Raceway Kit for Small 1-2 Wire - 8X L15.7 W0.59 H0.4, CMC03 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_fabc_QYVVNABZZF6EQ4QAATEA?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - 125" Cord Cover Wall Cable Management System - Cable Hider Raceway Kit for a Power Cord, Ethernet Cable, Speaker Wire - 8X L15.7in, W0.59in H0.4in, CMC-03White https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_Z499NAG465Q7R5H6ZWQ4?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
Then paint it the color of your wall. Or install an outlet directly behind your desk
Many newer homes are starting to come pre-wired for this reason. But if you are not pre-wired, yes you run speaker wire. If you have attic crawl space that can save a lot of headaches. If you have carpet then you can often run under/along the baseboard and/or under the carpet. Some walls are actually fairly easy to fish wire through vertically, some are not. If you have a vertical section in a corner then these can be pretty cool (link below, not that specific one necessarily but that kind of thing). They are paintable and when in the corner of a room they tend to blend right in.
Special note: When running wires in an attic or inside the wall make sure to use in-wall rated wires!
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Everyone do themselves a favor and get these.
I also adhere the power strip to the back of the tv or tv stand. Keeps everything hidden and off the floor.
I don't know if you've already done this, but I would use some of these, to conceal the cables. Just attach them under the table and slip the cables through
You are really going to possibly blow through $200 just because you can't find a way to get a cable to the other side of a room? I mean, it's your money, but dang.
You can probably attach the cable along the wall, and then use a little cover that's the same color as your wall.
One-Cord Channel Cable Concealer - CMC-03 Cord Cover Wall Cable Management System - 125" Cable Hider Raceway Kit for a Power Cord, Ethernet Cable, Speaker Wire - 8X L15.7in, W0.59in H0.39in, White https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_6PPwFbC2YEQS9
Something like this would do well. Might need to do something about the chunky parts of the cord (think you can get pi chargers without it)
You can always find little raceways that fully cover cables and are white colored to match the wall such as this one
edit: and if it can help, you can get a 10ft power strip and just run that from the outlet, mount it underneath the desk, and cable manage with that and some J style raceways
Not sure what you mean by losing usable space by wrapping cables up.
Can you move the sub to close to the cabinet? Can you scoot the cabinet away from the wall a couple of inches? Then you could route cables on the back of the cabinet with the raceway or cable ties I linked before. If not, then just mount it all under the desk and the cables from the pc and the subwoofer you can bundle together and even use those cable hiding plastic pathways to hide those.
I would mount everything on the bottom of the desk so it can't be seen personally.
For your situation, I think the easiet option would be covering the cable run if you are allowed to do so. There are plenty of low profile cable management runs you could utilize, this one for example https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF. These would prevent a quick and easy cut, and could even make identifying the cable's location a little more difficult than the other houses once it's painted. Also, I'd make sure the camera has a better view of the cable, so you could spot the person approaching earlier.
Keep in mind at some point this year Ring is going to release 24/7 recording on their hardwired devices.
As for me... A coworker of mine just had their entire neighborhood burglarized, his car stolen and house broken into. The suspects had a jamming device that scrambled all nearby wireless networks. Around 7 houses got hit, and all the people with Ring floodlights, doorbells, anything WiFi (he had a doorbell and floodlight cam) did not get any footage of the suspects. His neighbors with hardwired cameras did get footage. Upon further investigating online I see that WiFi deauth spammers (WiFi Jammers) can be bought and set up in less than an hour, for less than 10 dollars from Amazon. Look into NodeMCU if you want to learn more.
This is prompting me to change my setup. I'm selling off my Floodlight cam, and I've invested into a POE switch that I'm going to plug Stick Up Cams into. That way my cameras are wired, so no $10 deauth spammer will render my cameras useless, and I get the benefit of reliable, better performing hardwired cameras.
Combining a Ring Stick Up POE with Ring smart lighting seems like the most wise decision anybody in Ring's ecosystem can make at the moment, since their Alarm system is great. I hope Ring releases more POE or ethernet options for more cameras in the future. WiFi is not an option if you are at all serious about security, since 802.11w-2009 is not supported by 99% of security cameras and routers at this time.
I’ve always used cord channels or raceways to manage speaker wires in apartments. Make sure the double sided tape isn’t too sticky like 3m vhb tape. It will damage the paint when you take them off. You can also purchase 3m command strips for easy removal if you’re not sure about the generic tape that comes with the kit. I’ve included a couple links below to get you started. Good luck!
https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF
https://www.amazon.com/Command-Small-Refill-Strips-Clear/dp/B07KHQR69D
https://www.amazon.com/Command-Damage-Free-Poster-posters-Packaging/dp/B0751VFF2X
Pretty much what /u/michrech said then. Does your gateway look like this?
If so, based on what you've said so far, my suggestion would be to run a very long Ethernet cable from one of the ports circled in red in that picture to the gaming PC. You'll want a Cat-5e or Cat-6 cable long enough to tuck around corners and doorways to get from the gateway to the PC. I like Monoprice for cheap cables, but most Cat-5e or Cat-6 cable should do (avoid flat ones, they don't generally work well over long distances). If your home is carpeted, you can often push the cable under the baseboard to hide it. Otherwise, you can get cable concealers that lets you hide the cable.
Use a small cable raceway.
The primary problem with powerline is low operational certainty. What does that mean? It means that it may work flawlessly; it may never work at all; it may start off working and then degrade all at once or randomly over time, or whenever mom plugs in her hair dryer, etc. In short, electrical circuitry is not a good networking medium, and even if powerline adapters might appear to work for you, they really don't make a good long-term, reliable solution in most cases.
First choice is a wired link of some kind. If you can't do in-wall Cat6, how about inside some discrete raceway? If not, do you have TV coaxial cable in the house? If yes, and you have coax ports close enough to your router and upstairs location, I would try MoCa, via a pair of GoCoax MoCa 2.5 adapters, plus MoCa-compatible splitter(s) anywhere in the cable path where a splitter(s) might currently reside.
If you can't hard-wire at all, I would look at Eero, whose technology would give just about the best shot at decent gaming quality over wireless backhaul. If you can wait until November 2, Eero 6 is coming out and a dual-band 2-pack ($199) would probably be more than sufficient for a basic two-floor setup. Just make sure to enable "Optimize for Conferencing & Gaming" (Eero's layperson term for SQM QoS), give Eero up to 24 hours to auto-adjust to your local layout and ISP speed and you should be good to go, problems solved.
First off, to propagate as much of that 1Gb duplex internet around your house as possible, you want a bare-minimum of one hard-wired ethernet port per floor (three total). The best way is with ethernet, either in-wall or on-wall (via discrete raceway), otherwise via MoCa using pre-existing TV coaxial cables. Lastly, avoid powerline, because electrical wire, despite the illusion of being usable as networking wire, is a poor choice for long-term reliability, regardless of whether it appears to work now or not.
If you can get at least one wired port per floor to a good-enough wifi broadcast spot, then you want to run SMB-grade wired APs plus a 2Gb/s NAT wired router, optionally a PoE switch in between if using ethernet. For ~$450 total, I would run a Cisco RV340 router ($192) and three TP-Link EAP225v3 Omada APs ($60 ea, $180 total), each powered by the included PoE injectors, plus the OC200 Omada controller ($88) for central configuration and support for seamless client roaming (from AP to AP).
If you cannot hard-wire any backbone to the other two floors, I would opt for a 3-pack of Eero units, one per floor; either Eero dual-band ($249) for 75-100Mb/s of internet for each device connected to a remote node, or Eero Pro tri-band ($499) for 200-300Mb/s of internet for each device connected to a remote node. If you need extra wired ports at any Eero location, just wire in a $20 unmanaged switch to the second ethernet jack on the Eero, then wire in your devices to the switch.
Follow the above logic in sequence, and you'll have the best network possible for around or just slightly above $400.
https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/
maybe something like this?
Amazing what these can do... other than the main three wires to my tv (ARC hdmi cable from receiver, firestick hdmi, and power cable) everything else is just stuffed behind my A/V console lol
I’ve used this. It’s easy to install, and supposedly comes off clean for deinstallation using a hairdryer.
https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF
I'm sure what ever country your in, you can find something similar:
https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF
Hiring someone to go through the wall is going to be more then $100 for sure, even if it's a short run. Granted, I'm in the states and don't know much about pricing in Malaysia but I can almost guarantee it'll be pricey.
DIY through the wall is easy if you already have the tools and know what you're doing but the time to figure it out and actually do it from scratch might not be worth it. Snaking cables is a pain in the ass but look into it and see if it's worth it to you.
The best thing would probably running it along the molding near the ceiling or floor if you have. Even if you don't have the molding, you can buy cable covers like these or cheaper (https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=zg_bs_6577543011_2/137-2183393-8855208?pd_rd_i=B07D8WVJWF&th=1) and run it the whole way. I've run cable 75+ feet through my apt and you wouldn't really know it was there unless you were looking for it.
So lovely! Amazon sells really inexpensive wire covers that are so easy to apply if you'd ever be interested in concealing the black wires! :)
Obsessed with your couches too
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07D8WVJWF/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
And something like this here
https://www.amazon.ca/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF
Something like this. There's lots of solutions.
you can buy on amazon these cable runway strip things that will kind of blend with the wall: https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=sr_1_18?crid=3HIQ4HRR4WEJO&dchild=1&keywords=cable+runway&qid=1629856792&sprefix=cable+runway%2Caps%2C225&sr=8-18 i use them where the base board meets the floor.
I've seen a lot of people drilling holes under their keyboards/mousepads to hide the cables. This could help the cable management. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQlWeawnGwY. Also I personally suggest these for hiding cables from outlet to source: https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=wire+hider&qid=1629090050&sr=8-4. (I got a different version because my desk is a different color but this seems to be the same).
Clean set-up!
I'd maybe get a cable cover for that wire coming from the center wall piece but not sure if that helps at all:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_3.Q-FbDZ48NX2
or similar items - look up wire track - they have similar items in Home Depot / etc type stores - Ive used them to run cables in my house - buy 1-2 more then you think you need.. cause it never hurts to have a extra few feet.. I ran short and well got lazy about buying more and had to make due with what I had - so while my cables are up-out of the way - they are not "hidden" as well as they could be by putting them in wire track stuff.. lol
i use this
The details are going to vary depending on the details of your particular home but there are a number of ways to run ethernet cabling. Run it along rafters or floor joists using cable clips to hold it in place.
Run it along the floor or ceiling, concealing it behind a cable channel. These can be painted to match the wall.
Or drill a hole in the floor and feed it up into the room from below.
I've run it on the outside of my house using the cable channeling. Punch through the wall, feed the cable out, run it along the house, punch another hole to feed it in. A shot of caulk seals the holes around the cable.
If you want to get fancy feed it into a wall mount socket using a keystone jack.
Edit: Long runs of cable can be bought relatively cheaply at Monoprice. The ones with pre-fitted jacks will require a larger hole going through a wall. Bulk cable would be easier to work with but you'll have to put the jacks on, which can be fiddley (8 wires that have to be in a specific order).
How about using cable raceways down the hall to hard wire an access point? Not the most aesthetically pleasing but it might not look too bad if it's paint matched with the interior wall.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07D8WVJWF/
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0015EA3P2/
Mesh networks are good, but yeah nothing beats getting a house properly wired.
I live in an old farmhouse, so I definitely get wiring complications. If you can't run it under a carpet/rug/baseboard/etc then the best solution I've found is to use cable channels like this: https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF and just stick them to the wall/ceiling...
That said, I currently have a projector that has all the wiring held to the wall/ceiling via 3M hooks, so I'm not exactly the most stylistic when it comes to design.
Usually what I do is run the ones behind the monitor down the back of the monitor desk mount, then back behind/under the desk using either cable channels or mountable zip ties, and then buy extensions for any of the cables on amazon if I need them
Eh, it's not that hard when you have such few pieces of equipment that OP has. 2 speakers, 1 monitor, and a desktop. Those are the only wires he has to hide.
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Mouse and keyboard are wireless, he doesn't have an xlr mic or desk mic, doesn't have a second or third monitor, doesn't have surround sound, doesn't have a UPS, doesn't have an electric desk, etc.. This is all when it starts getting difficult to properly hide the wires.
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You'd be surprised how easy it is to hide a few wires if you get a couple of these. https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/ref=sr_1_3?crid=1GEFPJTBL558K&keywords=wire+channel+for+wall&qid=1557500835&s=gateway&sprefix=wire+channel%2Csporting%2C162&sr=8-3
What MillionGunman is saying is to use raceways. Get yourself a kit of these and fucking install it yourself. Use electrical tape to secure it from your stupid dog and stupid family when you have to go under doors and shit.
And it's less to do with frames, it has more to do with RELIABILITY. Wired ensures you have a game with no hiccups or skips in gameplay. It also makes you not a bitch because you aren't forcing someone ELSE to deal with the fact you're on wireless.
https://www.amazon.com/One-Cord-Channel-Cable-Concealer-Management/dp/B07D8WVJWF/