You had one in the last thread. Don't try to mask what this really is. You get your payback so we're good right?
Not like it matters - the intellectual level of these threads is about as high as a 5th grader's science project where the kid didn't get any help from their parents.
Enjoy your...
Oh nice, I seem to recall rolling my eyes before. Was this a ploy to get me back? Is that how petty this is?
Whatever dude - stay in the dark for all I care. You seem like the prosumer type that just buys a lot of crap and then convinces themselves that they know everything there is to know...
Power profile - in windows you go to control panel - power; make sure you're set to high performance for testing - when plugged in high performance should be what you use. On battery - power saver. You should probably test both to know what you'll get either way.
Don't worry about going crazy. It's a crazy response to a crazy situation.
It looks like you're getting a crash course in wifi technology - you may need it down the road.
So you switched out components (the router) and your connection stayed the same. Unfortunately you switched it out with...
Are your antennas placed correctly?
What it all boils down to is signal quality, interference, hardware and software.
We rule it all out to find what is going on.
Signal is good - then there may be a wireless device like an NFC or airprint printer, wireless speakers or some kind of general...
Did you ever find out what your signal strength is?
I can go right now and put my antennas in a wonky position and easily break my speeds down to 10mbps.
If that's the case I'd see what the TX power is at, can you find out what your RSSI is when connected at 5GHZ? I'd be thorough and get the readings right next the unit line of sight with no obstructions and again where ever it is you are shooting for.
If the signal is fine, back off the power...
Well you've changed firmware right? Maybe something changed and you need to adjust for it. This is merely a guess - but I handle close to 10 Asus wireless products and let me tell you they have insane power behind the wifi - it is not outside the realm of possibility that you need to slide...
It's possible your ISP is blocking it. Try TCP/TAP or TCP/TUN.
I like TAP because it makes it like you're on the same network.
You could try another port as well - it really depends on how your ISP blocks it if it does.
Nah, I have had it enabled and it was crazy fast. I'll take my first hand experience over your condescending tone. I bet a lot of cool things don't happen for you with that kind of crap.;)
If only there was some sort of file distribution protocol that could send files to a machine from other...