I've always been thinking that a more recent wireless router is a good thing by itself, because of better hardware. But obviously, lots of people seem to get by fine running very old routers with 40+ clients connected on various protocols, generations, and bands, tons of network activity both high speeds and with lots of connections. I am talking in a consumer context here, home routers, but in the possibly most demanding home use cases that can be imagined.
So I guess my question is, what is the practical extent of an SoC with more cores and higher frequency, and larger amounts of RAM clocked at higher speeds? Did everything get 'good enough' at some point (2016, 2020? 2024)? Can some types of common network activities overload a relatively modern router? 50+ wireless clients? 1000 torrents? Several PC's syncing backups of thousands of small files at the same time? Would latency suffer? Reading the CPU and RAM utilization graphs in my Asus routers' interface never really seemed to give me any insights as they always seemed low no matter what I was doing.
So I guess my question is, what is the practical extent of an SoC with more cores and higher frequency, and larger amounts of RAM clocked at higher speeds? Did everything get 'good enough' at some point (2016, 2020? 2024)? Can some types of common network activities overload a relatively modern router? 50+ wireless clients? 1000 torrents? Several PC's syncing backups of thousands of small files at the same time? Would latency suffer? Reading the CPU and RAM utilization graphs in my Asus routers' interface never really seemed to give me any insights as they always seemed low no matter what I was doing.