For you, maybe. Regular consumers should not be made to be unwitting beta testers.Heck, as a former Router/AP systems design guy - this is a good place to be, honestly
For you, maybe. Regular consumers should not be made to be unwitting beta testers.Heck, as a former Router/AP systems design guy - this is a good place to be, honestly
FWIW - I spent $350 for a dedicated pfSense box without wireless - and that's money well spent, considering needs at the time...
That was the point I was trying to make.Not everybody is Router PROs and money does not grow on trees yeat
As someone who relies on access to streaming media from USA from the other side of the globe, VPN is very important to me. The first thing I always zero in on when these reviews come out is the CPU capabilities and the number of cores. Adding a VPN speed test to the router reviews at a few different encryption levels would be a nice addition.That CPU also has the potential to reach pretty high performance levels with VPN, as it contains an AES crypto engine, so it's not just about the increase in clock speed or IPC. I don't know however if Asus leverages it in their firmware.
As someone who relies on access to streaming media from USA from the other side of the globe, VPN is very important to me. The first thing I always zero in on when these reviews come out is the CPU capabilities and the number of cores. Adding a VPN speed test to the router reviews at a few different encryption levels would be a nice addition.
Thank you @thiggins for the excellent review of the router. I was curious about it since it was announced.
Excellent point about VPN speeds correlating with native WAN speeds. My VPN speeds improved when my fiber connection was upgraded from 100Mbps to 200Mbps. I then was able to go from no encryption to AES-128-CBC with no impact on streaming media performance.I agree that it would be interesting to see "lab" tests of what a router can do with VPN with various levels of encryption you also need to test at various WAN speed levels. A router that can give you 95% of your ISP through put on a 75/10 connection may not handle 95% at 300 Mbps, 500 Mbps or 1000 Mbps.
Also some people want to run a VPN client and others a server. Just as WAN- LAN speeds can very from LAN-WAN speeds s0 possibly can VPN client and server speeds.
While adding VPN testing to the all ready involved router tests would be time consuming for the testers it certainly would be interesting to see the comparisons for some of the top of the line newer routers with fast processors.
Excellent point about VPN speeds correlating with native WAN speeds. My VPN speeds improved when my fiber connection was upgraded from 100Mbps to 200Mbps. I then was able to go from no encryption to AES-128-CBC with no impact on streaming media performance.
Ciper on both devices was AES-256-CBC.
That's interesting, the recent Atoms should be fairly powerful for VPN, did your Atom not support AES-NI? Just out of curiosity could you mention the model.
You should try AES-128-GCM on the i7 - pretty fast
That's interesting, the recent Atoms should be fairly powerful for VPN, did your Atom not support AES-NI? Just out of curiosity could you mention the model.
For me VPN achievements or speedtests are really irrelevant unless someone post the latency to the VPN server as well. From my fiber at home of 200/45 I can get 111/45 via VPN if the latency to the VPN server is 6ms (usually meaning same country vpn) & lower further away, on RT-AC68U using Astrill RouterPro AES-256-CBC-SHA256. However if the latency is is 130ms I can get half of it. That means 1.7Ghz CPU should do at least 2x better.
R9000 is quite VPN efficient but DD-WRT is a mess in terms of stability for the time being.
VPN latency has virtually nothing to do with the router hardware. It depends on the distance between both endpoints of the tunnel.
Most of the candidate customers for this device - they've probably followed Asus across multiple devices. These folks know that any time a new device ships, there's going to be some opportunities for improvement.
[opinion] == The device performed well in Tim's testing overall - good enough across all parts... Asus knows this is a premium/flagship device, and fixes will be forthcoming. I do take exception that people take a couple of small issues, and blow them way out of proportion, and this is what this thread has turned into.
Could Asus have done better? Maybe, we won't likely know, as those decisions are part of the daily Project Meetings that all companies have when a product is close to shipping.
Welcome To SNBForums
SNBForums is a community for anyone who wants to learn about or discuss the latest in wireless routers, network storage and the ins and outs of building and maintaining a small network.
If you'd like to post a question, simply register and have at it!
While you're at it, please check out SmallNetBuilder for product reviews and our famous Router Charts, Ranker and plenty more!