Interesting unboxing. I do love the QoS buzzword being thrown about. QoS in
this case can only relate to transmitted packets as I understand it, and
then only from the traffic being presented from the switch ports. You're
dealing with gigabit ethernet on the switch so if someone is streaming a
video and another is play BF3 online with a 100Mb sub 10ms latency internet
connection then you may gain a tiny advantage by your BF3 Traffic having
higher priority than the video. Otherwise it's TOSH!
The actual process involved in "conneting" to the internet is quite
involved. You will have your machines on a Class C network (255.255.255.0
subnet) and they can/will only communicate (without routing) with other
devices in that network.A router has a local side and a WAN side and it
will take your class C tagged traffic (local)put it in a Class A (WAN)
packet and send it across the internet. So when you request google.com,
it's sent to your router which forwards it to you.
WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW WOW LINUS, MAN! CALM THE FUCK DOWN!
Take a chill pil I know that the temeratures are still high EVEN when we
passed the FRIKKING EFFING STUPID SUMMER and are FINALLY moving into autumn
and winter but CALM DOWN! unless you had more important stuff to do and
taht is your excuse for rushing the unboxing and review THEN you are
justifiable
No. 1st off you pay for TV and dont pay for YT 2nd blocking ads and not
paying attention are totally different. if you dont pay attention the user
still get count for an ad watch. if you use an ad blocker they dont get
count for an ad watch. if everyone used an ad blocker you would have to
start paying and who wants that?
I am in the market for a router but with the new free shipping needing an
order to be over $100 I may not be buying from NCIX. Just not sure I can
spend enough this month to get the free shipping and this has happened to
me in previous months too. Oh well.
It let's you have more connectivity options between you and the internet
and you and other computers on the network. This one also dynamically picks
what traffic is more important so the important stuff is faster than less
important stuff.
@LinusTechTips If you are wondering why people stop subscribing to your
channel you should take a look at how NOT funny you are in your video's. If
i find a better reviewer I'm gonna quit your channel too. Take care, nick.
my bad, watched late at night and i dislike wi-fi because of stability,
speed and the fact that the wi fi part on all my past routers have blown
up...........so not happy that I have to keep replacing the damn units
I have the Western Digital MyNet 600 and I like it. The FasTrack feature is
really easy to set up and works very well. Hey Linus, are you going to be
using this MyNet 900 for your home, or is NCIX going to use it?
I only think of my router as something that lets me connect to my internet-
can someone explain to me what these "high-end" routers are for? I'm
guessing a home-network-server thing, but I honestly have no idea.
I wish I got paid to talk to a camera and open boxes (I know that's not all
you do, but it seems that way sometimes)! Although I'm not sure I'd be as
liked as your are, you are much more photogenic than I.
To be honest those intros are kinda weird... and bad... I don't think
people really need a weird intro to watch it. Don't get me wrong I like
your unboxings/reviews but the new intros are just... meh..
yea unfortunately thats true. Netgear did that on some of their routers.
Annoying since on WD website it doesnt mention it either. You have to
download their product manual to find that out.
that is going to be my router, finally a fucking fan on a router. im tired
of my routers over heating, then i plug in my laptop cooler to cool it
down, but it still fucking does it
ummm, y u mad? I've been looking for a router like this but it still
doesn't have enough ports without a switch, apart from that its a great
piece of kit by the looks of it???
you forgot the ps3 and the laptops. I'm over wi-fi its unreliable, slower
than cable, not as stable as wi-fi and all my past routers the wi-fi has
blown up :/
What if i put a 64GB flash drive on that? could i use that to hold
streaming media(music)? and could i access it like a cloud server to change
it at will?
noob question… I currently have an old ADSL router which I want to replace,
and the synology router would nicely complement my synology NAS. However,
as the router only has a wan connection and no modem / ADSL port, how am I
meant to connect this router to my ISP's network ?
+sliiiimjimDo you understand the difference between a "modem router" and a "router"?All routers need a modem, they simple route an existing connection.The confusion began when you said "I currently have an old ADSL router which I want to replace".It very much sounds like you have an old "modem router" which you wish to replace and you can't do that with a "router" such as the Synology RT1900ac. You need to buy a modem router.
+Hardware Unboxed errrr…. I think we may both be misunderstanding one another as your replies (to me) seem to contradict one another.My question was ultimately - "How do I use this with an ADSL connection?"Your 1st reply suggested (to me) that I do not need my original modem as the blue WAN port is my modem / ADSL portThen you are suggesting in the last reply that the original modem IS required.I think it is possibly just me misinterpreting your reply. I assume the connection goes :Telephone point > ADSL Filter > RJ11 to my original modem > RJ45 from original modem to router.If this is correct (which is what my original question was relating to), then the next question is that of configuration of the modem & router.As both these devices may try to control DHCP, DNS, NAT etc… they could potentially cause some headaches… so what do I need to do to essentially make the "modem" just handle the physical ADSL sync part, then let the router handle the rest such as DHCP etc…Do I need to enable some sort of bridge mode on the modem, disable DHCP on the modem, and then enable dhcp on the router?Thanks for taking the time to respond :)
+Paul In Distance testing is so inaccurate I don’t have a useful means to compare it to other routers. Through general usage the range does seem very good but I am not going to measure it out as there are just way too many factors that affect wireless range making it better or worse at any given time.
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