New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
802.11 ax | breaking 10gbps
Wow....
Thats would be super fast
Comments
I'm still on 802.11n, not even AC yet...
This si great for public spaces since it can use a far larger total bandwidth but this does not mean it may have a large bandwidth increase for a single user over AC.
This standard would be great in public areas due to the spacings and the fact it can handle more users... My university is starting to deploy AC etc and since then the data rates have increased BUT the outgoing/incoming backhaul has not.
Most of the standards like AX and others onward may not be a great thing if its a single home. Now if its an apartment or apartment complex then yes i think AX will be a fantastic idea. More users in less bandwidth but more chances and more devices connected..
I would say it is a get.
Then you actually try and use it in a house with 36 inch thick stone walls and you still only get 10mbit on a good day
The White House?
Isn't n faster than ac?
Someday it will seem slow.
Considering that's at 160mhz channels, you're talking SUPER line of site requirements or it's flat out not going to work.
This is going to be sooooooooooo useful like 5G... Damn it. Hey look I have that fukn fast AX WiFi but I have to sit on my router to connect to it.
How useful can it be when the distance is so damn short. I have an AC router and it barely connects in my office room while n is working even if on a low level. Most of the time that AC AP is not even visible because the signal is too short to be picked up.
And I thought it was the problem with my router
In Toronto, our carriers force us to be happy with $100/mo 25 Mbps down/10 Mbps up DSL...
Long story short: we need fiber. Such a developed city stuck with slow Internet or 100 Mbps cable (you will almost never get more than 30 Mbps for it). I heard that Bell was installing fiber in Scarborough (a part in Toronto), so I'm excited about that. (probably won't get it since they'll charge like $2938830/mo for 1 Gbit.)
Oh yeah - they should fix the aging infrastructure too. When it rains, the DSL takes a crap out the door and drops from advertised to anything below 0.1 Mbps. So basically, we don't even need N speeds yet, the router will never be used at it's full capacity
Naw, you can get like 300 repeaters... Warning: expect a max of 10.1 Mbps
$60 for 200mbps unmetered
Where
30 USD for 200mbps unmetered, Portugal
MX
But Portugal sucks... :P
This could be very usefull for my 6mbit DSL connection.
I live in an apartment complex and my ASUS 2400 can be seen across the street and connectable. and across the the way. I can connect to it all over the complex(10 units)..... It would be your router at that point.
Get a decent router.
Well i have. A tplink n router... And i am satisfied since... Internet bandwith isn't much ovrr here....
Well, while you may currently be unable to benefit from it at home, surely your wireless ISP using WiFi in their core will be able to deliver higher bandwidth to the distribution points, potentially avoiding the bottlenecks in the core.
Cant wait these wireless to extend my 10 Mbps internet
Just get one of those directional antennas. If you're on a high floor, aim it out through the balcony
Sounds perfect for fhe new 10Gbit home connections here in Singapore!
Lol for me no need as my router works fine with 4 built in attenas still.
But i am on the second floor So i feel i may be at an advantage lol.
But i know a lot of people who buy cheap routers with newer tech and expect it to be great.
Many people do need to realize what they spend on stuff does relate to performance and this is rarely proven wrong.
We actually discussed this at work today, I believe the reaction was "so, when a bird decides to fly in the path of a backhaul and it disassociates, then what"
You got 10gbps? For company gotta be expensive, can't wait for the price to drop so I can afford to subscribe to that for residential
cries on 200mbps stinktel
Over here... If you have a ten mbps connections DSL... You are considered lucky...
Overe here 4G is at 20-50MbPS
But not even 200 Mbit fiber is available here.
Der> @theroyalstudent said:
Yes at the moment it's still expensive but when you see the residential prices for 1 Gbit and even VQ offers now 10Gbits for a very good pricing I think it will be cheaper soon.
Ouch where are you from?
$120 for an internet speed between 1 and 30 mbps (more likely to be ~8mbps). Quite often includes at least 50% Packet Loss.