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Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci-e nic and 5ghz
Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci-e nic and 5ghz












realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci-e nic and 5ghz
  1. Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci e nic and 5ghz for free#
  2. Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci e nic and 5ghz update#

If anyone interested in reading some of the differences in g vs n protocol that can effect performance - here is a few year old whitepaper from Motorola This little mini N looks good, $9 and I can turn off my old G wrt54g router ) If not for your thread would of never thought of it and just left my G AP running.

Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci e nic and 5ghz for free#

The only reason I have G running at all is my son's older laptop, hey I need a few bucks for free shipping anyway!!

Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci e nic and 5ghz update#

If you buddy comes over with his ancient pos laptop and wants to use your wireless and only has G, tell him to update his POS machine ) But as soon as your legacy G stuff is gone - switch to N only. But if you still have some legacy G, other than spending more money for a G AP - sure run mixed mode. Which now all your clients that have support N for years can use that. Lets say your old G router died, doesn't make a lot of sense to get G again. Running mixed mode is not a good solution, unless you have no other choice. And will still be good practice when we go to AD. This is been good advice when we went from B to G, G to N and now N to AC. What I would recommend to anyone that is moving from G to N or even AC - just keep your older router and use it as AP to provide access to your older clients that do not support the new protocol. What does it matter all that much if your internet is only G speeds anyway ) You are always better to be in native N then Mixed environment, be it you will notice a the performance hit or not. So depending what your router actually goes into could have an effect if no actual G clients connected and using the bandwidth at there slower speed. Now if no clients actually connected there is mixed or protection mode, etc. For example guard interval of 400ns vs 800ns, frame aggregation, etc. Many of these new features can not be used if you have to allow for clients that do not understand them. Some people think its not an issue, while the protocol and just common sense tells you differently ) There were many changes to the protocol from G to N. There have been many a discussion about performance hit of mixed mode. 1) Press Windows key + X, open Device Manager, right-click on your wireless adapter, and choose 'Properties' 2) Under the 'Advanced' tab, scroll down to 'Wireless Mode' and make sure that you select is 802.11a/ac 3) Once you have this value, you might get connected to 5GHz. Seems like? heheheeh - you will find some conflicting opinions to be sure around here. "Seems like having it Mixed was part of the problem."














Realtek rtl8723ae wireless lan 802.11n pci-e nic and 5ghz