by Jonathan Updated Jan 5, 2023 Published Jan 5, 2023 Raspberry Pi News
1024, 4096, adapter, air, ax210, bandwidth, client, cloud, cm4, compute module, computer, enterprise, fast, faster, frequency, homelab, insight, intel, interference, Jeff Geerling, local, m2, mac, MacBook, mesh, mu-mimo, netgear, network, networking, ngw, odfm, pcie, penetration, performance, personal, phase, qam, radio, radiofrequency, raspberry pi, rf, setup, speed, test, tp link, upgrade, wax620, wax630e, wifi, wifi 6, wifi 6e, wifi 7, wireless, wpa2, wpa3
A Raspberry Pi is faster than the latest M2 MacBook Air? You bet it is! And it’s not clickbait—watch the video to learn about how WiFi 6E is a major upgrade over WiFi 6, and what might be in store for WiFi 7! Mentioned in this video (some links are...
by Jonathan Updated Jan 8, 2021 Published Jan 8, 2021 Raspberry Pi News
10g, antenna, asus, benchmark, benchmarking, cm4, compare, comparison, compute module, compute module 4, debian, dhcpcd, dhcpd, ethernet, faster, github, iperf, iperf3, Jeff Geerling, kernel, linux, mac, network, networking, performance, pi 4, pi os, raspberry pi, rj45, router, rx, speed, stack, test, testing, tx, wifi, wifi 6, wired, wireless
As it turns out, my benchmarking process was flawed, and I had to learn a bit about the Linux networking stack to figure out why! Special thanks to commenter marvell marvell for pointing out the obvious, and to Javier Choclin for suggesting I try out the MZHOU...
by Jonathan Updated Dec 21, 2020 Published Dec 21, 2020 Raspberry Pi News
10g, 2.5G, 5g, 802.11ac, 802.11ax, airport, asus, ax, ax200, benchmark, cm4, compute module, cross compile, dell, driver, edup, ethernet, firmware, gigabit, intel, iwlwifi, Jeff Geerling, kernel, linux, network, networking, pci, pci express, pcie, performance, raspberry pi, rt-ax86u, sbc, wifi, wifi 6, wireless, wise tiger, xps, xps 13
The Raspberry Pi has built in 802.11ac WiFi. But it’s not that fast. Let’s see what we can do about that! I tried getting both an ASUS AC51 and Intel AX200 PCI express card working on the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4. How did that work out? Check out this...