See here for the current discussion about it:
http://forums.smallnetbuilder.com/showthread.php?t=17972
http://forums.smallnetbuilder.com/showthread.php?t=17972
That's OpenWRT, not Linksys's own firmware.
Linksys has provided OpenWrt with an initial code release that enables open source firmware development. OpenWrt has requested some patches to provide more open source functionality at the Wi-Fi driver level that requires cooperation from Marvell. Marvell is working on the usable driver and getting the required approvals through GPL.
I know it is not Linksys/Belkin firmware.
Did you read the first post?
They are obtaining code from linksys and marvell.
I know it is not Linksys/Belkin firmware.
Did you read the first post?
They are obtaining code from linksys and marvell.
Why? What is the appeal?
Sorry Tim saw this late. 4x4 got my curiosity. All these AC3200 routers are a marketing scam for noobs to buy their product. Just my opinion.
Somewhat agree, while there is a benefit to it (able to enjoy dual band for both 802.11n and AC while still allowing for AC devices to have their own dedicated wifi radio, it does nothing to improve single device speed.
They should have gone with a 4 stream or more wifi adapter or if possible, a 6 stream 802.11ac radio, that would allow real world gigabit speeds over wifi under good conditions.
As it is now, it is a huge price premium for only a small performance boost that will only show its self when you have both new and legacy wifi clients on the network.
I would much rather see a $300 version of the R7000 with 4 10GbE ports, along with a line of PCI-e 10 GbE adapters that are not insanely overpriced, thus moving wired networking a head a little for the consumer market.
Shipments start July 11. Please read the article linked on the first page of this thread for the answers to your other questions.So, is this router on the market yet, and if so, has anyone tried it? Supposed to be AC3200, but it's a tri-band router, 1-2.4Ghz & 2-5Ghz bands, 600/1300/1300. Maybe I'm missing something, but isn't this the same speed as the R7000? Would the only benefit for this router over the R7000 is that it would allow many more devices to connect before you notice a drop in speed, but if there was only 1 user, it wouldn't be any faster than the R7000, right?
I see a market for both AC2350 and AC3200 devices. If you have a lot of 5 GHz devices or have to share that band between a 802.11ac and a 802.11n device, then an AC3200 will prove to be a better improvement than an AC2350 device. Your 802.11n device will not slow down your 802.11ac device if both of them are streaming at the same time.
I agree that the marketing can be misleading - but that's nothing new. Plenty of folks also wrongly assumed that an AC1900 router implied that they could reach 1900 Mbps with a single device, or that simultaneous dual-band implied that a client could connect to both bands at the same time. People need to stop assuming that a number means what they WANT it to mean, and do some light research before buying a product - the answers are all out there on the web.
The web? The answers are right here @ SNB!People need to stop assuming that a number means what they WANT it to mean, and do some light research before buying a product - the answers are all out there on the web.
Where do you see the bottleneck that requires link aggregation? Individual connection delivered throughput is well below 1Gbps.I do want to start seeing routers/APs have the ability to do link aggregation soon though.
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