![]() ![]() ![]() I’ve got to wonder how well this works, especially given how closely those antennas are spaced. The front has an image of the adapter with its four antennas attached, making for an “imposing” half-octopus. The unit comes in a colour print retail cardboard box. ![]() So I settled for a Chinese alternative – the EDUP EP-AC1621 for AU$45 posted after stacking all the discounts I could find. At that price, I’d just buy another hAP ac and use that as the adapter … After some searching, I found some very expensive options available locally – about AU$120 which was just downright unreasonable. So I thought I’d get myself a three-stream device just to test – hopefully one that would be a bit less problematic under Linux than the previous 802.11ac USB adapters I’ve tried. In my case, maybe I should’ve gone with the hAP ac² instead and saved the money? The problem was that I had absolutely no three-stream capable equipment to use with it – so I wasn’t seeing any of the benefits of that third stream. In my quest for more wireless throughput, my hAP ac with three-stream 802.11ac wireless seemed to be the right choice. ![]()
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