OH! That link. Fixed and sorry for my dense head.*I click on the forum link at the bottom of the article & it still takes me to the sub-forum, not the thread.
So what about the previously announced RT-87U? ACxxxx numbers represent the maximum throughput the networking product can handle. That doesn’t necessarily mean per-device, as the RT-AC3200 talks to multiple .ac and .n devices at full speed, rather than having to slow down to the slowest device on the network. Only the RT-AC87U provides 33% more area coverage and more per-client bandwidth (1700 versus 1300), however it only has one .ac band versus the RT-3200’s two.
Thanks. Updated the story.Target Release date is Q3/Q4 2014.
Additional info there:
http://pcdiy.asus.com/2014/06/rt-ac3200-ultimate-802-11ac-6x6-router-computex-2014/
No AC6400 with 12x12 stream??... Pffftt...
No AC6400 with 12x12 stream??... Pffftt...
LOL.. reminds me of the TheOnion's Gillette Five Blades
Plus the NetGear one looks like a turtle on it's back
meanwhile you will need a massive usb dongle with 6 external antennas sticking out the side of your laptop to actually enjoy the benefits this router has to offer.
LOL.. reminds me of the TheOnion's Gillette Five Blades
Plus the NetGear one looks like a turtle on it's back
Asus said:...the RT-AC3200 talks to multiple .ac and .n devices at full speed, rather than having to slow down to the slowest device on the network.
Or maybe they're just saying that by having two radios on different bands
This quotation from the blog post is kind of confusing; it could be interpreted in multiple ways.
It could be interpreted as them saying that if you have N and AC devices connected to their current routers then the AC/multiple stream clients slow down to the same speed as the slowest client, and this router would fix that.
Or maybe they're just saying that by having two radios on different bands, it can transmit to a client on low 5ghz and high 5ghz at the same time. In that case, it only makes a difference if you have your clients segregated and multiple clients in each group trying to exchange data at the same time (and having to share time with their group-mates).
That's what this router is about. It has one 2.4 GHz radio, and two 5 GHz radios. That's how they come up with N600 + AC1300 + AC1300 = 3200 Mbps of total throughput.
So, you can have 802.11n devices use 2.4 GHz or the first 5 GHz radio, and devote exclusively the second 5 GHz radio to your 802.11ac clients.
No point getting this for myself (home), but for some customers I can see having three wireless networks in one device as an advantage.
Segregated into Guests, Customers and Company (internal), a single device would elegantly handle this situation. Given the firmware allows for it, of course.
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