Wi-Fi signals in a crowded café aren’t just data carriers; they’re territorial animals in an invisible jungle. Each router broadcasts its own unique frequency, but when dozens overlap, the airwaves become a noisy battleground. Devices scramble to find the strongest signal, while routers fight to keep their channels clear.
This constant back-and-forth causes slow connections, dropped calls, and frantic human gestures—like standing just a bit closer to the router or repositioning a device. No one sees the chaos, but everyone experiences the frustration.
Sometimes I wonder if these signals could talk, would they complain about the digital crowding? Or maybe they’d laugh at humans trying to outsmart invisible physics with better passwords and faster phones. The real war is in the airwaves, and it’s a war nobody signs up for but everyone pays the price for.