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Comment by johnklos

4 months ago

It amazes me that devices with Intel Puma chipsets are still sold new and are still in use in 2025. That's another story, though.

The number of wifi networks that're running around us has gotten so crazy that it's no wonder we all need wifi-6 to even get reasonable speeds. I'm the kind of person who goes around and disables wifi absolutely everywhere possible, so this is good to know, but what'd be even better is if devices stopped running wifi networks behind our backs. Sigh.

You really want 6e or 7 these days so you can shift to 6GHz. There are many more channels available, adoption is limited so there's less congestion and the signal attenuates more quickly and has higher free-space path loss as well. Sounds like you may already know all that but for anyone thinking about investing in an upgrade, the reasons listed above are why you'd want to invest in the latest tech.

  • Why would faster signal attenuation be a good thing?

    • Less area means less sources of interference for others (this property is also true in the other direction). So the attenuation reduces the signal area, and stronger attenuation lets the transmitter be "strong" in the house without the downsides in congested areas.

    • Small houses don't need a signal that travel through many walls. Probably no roof and floor too. So you can trade speed for range and have no overlaps with neighbors.

      Instead large houses need signals that go through roofs, floors and walls. But they probably also have a lot of family members inside, each one with their one, two or three wifi devices that interfere with the rest of the family. Maybe one repeater per room and 5 or 6 GHz would be good there too. 3 different video streams to people of the same couch could still be challenging.

  • notice wifi standard does not guarantee which frequency it will use. You can have wifi 6 on 2.4ghz wifi

The XB3 hardware isn't new. I was given one circa 2017 and now knowing that they used Intel Puma makes so much sense now.