OzarkEdge
Part of the Furniture
What is AiMesh 2?
Presumably, the next wave of AiMesh development. And hopefully, the crossing of the t's and the dotting of the i's of AiMesh 1.
OE
What is AiMesh 2?
IMO, any mesh implementation that does not have a dedicated backhaul, beit wired and/or a third radio, will have quirks and issues which for me would be very unattractive and limiting over a bridge or other time tested solution. It's all marketeering.Presumably, the next wave of AiMesh development. And hopefully, the crossing of the t's and the dotting of the i's of AiMesh 1.
OE
IMO, any mesh implementation that does not have a dedicated backhaul, beit wired and/or a third radio, will have quirks and issues which for me would be very unattractive and limiting over a bridge or other time tested solution. It's all marketeering.
OK but you first commit to taking a reading comprehension class.Time-tested technology expires. Mesh is destined to be wireless. Nobody wants to run cables. AiMesh on next generation tri-band AX routers will be more than any consumer needs. Meanwhile, my wireless dual-band AiMesh meets my needs 24x7 just fine.
Quit being such a curmudgeon! Show us your can-do Texas spirit... not that Ohio rust belt gloom and doom!
OE
OK but you first commit to taking a reading comprehension class.
NEVER said it had to be wired, I said it must be dedicated to backhaul - "beit wired and/or a third radio"
Tri-band router is exactly what I suggested - what do you think the reference to 3rd radio is all about? - "beit wired and/or a third radio"
Time tested technology when in reference to bridge mode or repeater mode does NOT expire
And if you're happy with a wireless repeater wrapped in a GUI and called AiMesh with limited ability to configure then I'm happy for you!
I've got all wired backhaul and there is no benefit and only penalty to using AiMesh over AP mode. The biggest penalty is frequency management.
No I did not give up too soon and again, I NEVER said wires were required. I also never said you had to manage frequencies, I merely pointed out that it was available in one scenario and not another. The mere fact that the same frequencies MUST be used on ALL radios for ALL nodes is an obvious pitfall, especially in a deployment where overlap is highly likely which is most in my opinion simply by the fact the nodes must be close enough together to reliably communicate at or near maximum bandwidth to make the back haul viable. Frequency reuse is a key principle in cell and mesh design and coverage. Read up on it some it can be very interesting.Nobody wants wires. Nobody wants to manage frequencies. People only do that because they have to. My dual-band wireless AiMesh works fine with no wires and two fixed channels. I don't see any penalty here. Maybe you just gave up too soon during the early roll-out of AiMesh.
OE
If you're happy with a GUI wrapped around a repeater/bridge then I'm happy for you.
AiMesh - central management of repeaters, no roaming technologies
AiRadar - beamforming, whatever is provided by the chip manufacturer
AiProtection - TrendMicro engine, available with other manufacturers too
AiCustomer - whoever believes all of the above is something "exclusive"
Those features aren't necessarily exclusive to AiMesh
ASUS is by no means the only manufacturer to do this. If the Wi-Fi Alliance had not done such a good job of branding, manfs would be calling their Wi-Fi routers Magic No-Wire Stupendo Terrific Ultra or something else.I mean ASUS likes to give non-exclusive features fancy names and claim them as advantages to ASUS products.
ASUS is by no means the only manufacturer to do this.
Asus added 802.11k and 802.11v support a few months ago. There is also a new option for 802.11r, but I don't see it enabled yet.
Then stop commenting on his posts. It's not adding anything to the discussion.@Val D. The questions you may have are not of interest to me.
Let's test it then! What routers support k/v at the moment? All AiMesh capable?
According to the build profiles:
@RMerlin - that added functionality would presumably be included and as effective/useful in AP mode end points as well. Do you agree?
No idea how it's actually implemented.
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