The Tech Co

Internet and WiFI Solutions for Homes & Businesses

Having a fast, secure, and stable network is essential in today’s connected world. We provide professional internet and networking setup, configuration, and troubleshooting services to ensure your home or business stays online without interruptions. Whether you’re dealing with slow speeds, dropped connections, or setting up a new network, our experts are here to help.

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Our Internet &
Networking Services

Internet Setup & Configuration

We handle complete internet installation and setup, ensuring optimal performance from day one.

Network Setup & Management

We design and implement secure, scalable networks for homes and offices.

Internet & Network Troubleshooting

Experiencing slow internet or frequent disconnections? We quickly diagnose and fix network issues.

Business Networking Solutions

We provide reliable networking solutions to keep your business productive.

Why Choose Our
Internet And WiFI Solutions

network solutions

Common Problems
We Fix

No matter the issue, we ensure your network runs smoothly and securely.

Internet keeps disconnecting

Weak Wi-Fi signal in certain areas

Slow download and upload speeds

Router not working or overheating

Devices not connecting to the network

Network security vulnerabilities

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Get Fast & Reliable Network Support Today​

Don’t let internet or network issues slow you down. Contact us today for professional internet setup, Wi-Fi installation, and network troubleshooting services. We’ll get you connected—fast and hassle-free.

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Serving Homes &
Businesses

We proudly provide internet and networking setup and troubleshooting services for:

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Homes and apartments

Offices and corporate environments

Retail stores and warehouses

Remote workers and home offices

Got Questions?
We’ve Got Answers.

Why is my NBN internet so slow even though I'm paying for fast speeds?

Slow NBN despite a fast plan is almost always caused by one of these: Wi-Fi interference or distance from the router (wired connections to the modem almost always achieve rated speeds), an ageing or cheap router that can’t process the plan speed, peak-hour congestion on the ISP’s network, or a misconfigured Quality of Service (QoS) setting. Running a wired speed test first isolates whether the issue is NBN/ISP-side or internal Wi-Fi. Upgrading from a basic ISP-supplied modem-router to a quality unit (TP-Link Archer, ASUS RT) typically closes most of the gap.

A mesh Wi-Fi network uses multiple access points (nodes) placed around a property that communicate with each other to create a single, seamless wireless network — no more connecting to different SSIDs as you move around. Mesh systems are ideal for homes over 200m², properties with thick walls, multi-storey buildings, or any space where a single router leaves dead zones. Brands like Eero, Ubiquiti, TP-Link Deco, and Netgear Orbi are commonly installed by The Tech Co across Perth homes and small offices.

 

Connecting two office locations uses either a Site-to-Site VPN (encrypted tunnel over the internet, cost-effective for SMBs) or a dedicated leased line (higher cost, higher reliability for large data volumes). A site-to-site VPN allows staff in both locations to access shared file servers, printers, and internal systems as if on the same office network. Configuration is done on the routers or firewall devices at each end. The Tech Co designs and deploys these solutions for Perth businesses — complexity and pricing depends on the hardware already in place.

After a router change, printers lose their Wi-Fi credentials and need to be reconnected to the new network. Most printers require a two-step process: resetting the wireless settings on the printer itself (usually via Settings > Network > Wireless Setup Wizard or a physical WPS button), then re-adding the printer in Windows (Settings > Printers & Scanners > Add). If the router also changed from 2.4GHz to 5GHz as the default band, older printers won’t connect — they require 2.4GHz. Enabling both bands on the router resolves this.

After a router change, printers lose their Wi-Fi credentials and need to be reconnected to the new network. Most printers require a two-step process: resetting the wireless settings on the printer itself (usually via Settings > Network > Wireless Setup Wizard or a physical WPS button), then re-adding the printer in Windows (Settings > Printers & Scanners > Add). If the router also changed from 2.4GHz to 5GHz as the default band, older printers won’t connect — they require 2.4GHz. Enabling both bands on the router resolves this.