I live in
a dense urban apartment building, and the interference from neighbors» Wi - Fi networks makes playing shooters like Battlefield 1 over Wi - Fi very tough.
Not exact matches
In the
dense urban environment we live in - typically with small
apartments and few yards - it's easy for common dog behaviors to quickly become problem behaviors.
With smaller spaces becoming increasingly necessary in
dense urban areas, it's always inspiring to see how others get creative with tiny
apartments, whether it's architects or anthropology professors in New York City, to this LEGO - inspired home in Barcelona's up - and - coming El Born district.
Smaller
apartments are a common thing in many older European cities, where the
urban fabric is
denser and built not just for the dominance of car traffic, as they are in most North American cities.
Today in
dense urban areas, tenants frequently change
apartments as their income grows and they tire of different neighborhoods.
But, if you live in a more
dense urban area or an
apartment building, it just doesn't make sense to get a microcell when ISPs like Comcast are working on rolling out data caps.
In contrast, in larger
urban settings, with their more
dense populations, neighbors (even in adjoining
apartments) often don't know each, competition over limited resources is more pronounced, and the attitudes of winning over others, rather than cooperating with them, tend to prevail.
The 80 percent of respondents who indicated they plan to eventually buy a house or
apartment contradicts a popular notion that millennial preference for living in
dense, walkable
urban areas makes home ownership less attractive to this generation.
High - rise
apartment and office buildings form a
dense urban core along Peachtree road.