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expiredphoinix | Staff posted Jan 04, 2025 09:43 AM
expiredphoinix | Staff posted Jan 04, 2025 09:43 AM

$139.99: ASUS RT-BE58U WiFi 7 AiMesh Extendable Router at Amazon

$140

$170

17% off
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Amazon [amazon.com] has ASUS RT-BE58U WiFi 7 AiMesh Extendable Router for $139.99. Shipping is free.

Price:
$30 lower (18% savings) than the list price of $169.99

Customer reviews:
4.5⭐ / 5,585 global ratings
100+ bought in past month

amazon.com/dp/B0DHWBS9G6 [amazon.com]

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About the Poster
Amazon [amazon.com] has ASUS RT-BE58U WiFi 7 AiMesh Extendable Router for $139.99. Shipping is free.

Price:
$30 lower (18% savings) than the list price of $169.99

Customer reviews:
4.5⭐ / 5,585 global ratings
100+ bought in past month

amazon.com/dp/B0DHWBS9G6 [amazon.com]

My other deals

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Model: Asus Rt-BE58U BE3600 Dual-Band Wi-Fi 7 Smart AiMesh Router, Black - Black

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Jan 04, 2025 10:41 PM
9 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
rbdchiJan 04, 2025 10:41 PM
9 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank rbdchi

They call it Wifi 7, but there's no support for the 6GHz band. Not sure what the point of getting this router is then.
6
Jan 05, 2025 03:28 PM
440 Posts
Joined May 2011
smohan123Jan 05, 2025 03:28 PM
440 Posts
Quote from rbdchi :
They call it Wifi 7, but there's no support for the 6GHz band. Not sure what the point of getting this router is then.
Nice call-out. It's very frustrating that WiFi 7 seems to have multiple definitions to different companies. It strikes me as some form of duplicity in calling the top line feature "WiFi 7" without also mentioning the lack of important other features which may constitute the setup being functionally slower than someone's current setup.

Very confusing to the consumer. Seems to me that the major thing to look for is support for 2.4/5/6 GHz bands with MLO. Without all of those, together, it is probably that one would be better off sticking to their current WiFi 6 or 6e setups. Especially given the typical high prices on "WiFi 7" offerings.
Jan 05, 2025 04:41 PM
678 Posts
Joined Jul 2017
Nintendo1474Jan 05, 2025 04:41 PM
678 Posts
Quote from rbdchi :
They call it Wifi 7, but there's no support for the 6GHz band. Not sure what the point of getting this router is then.
Probably the MLO and the preamble puncturing. 6Ghz only works if you're in the same room as the router, and doesn't help unless you're actively using more bandwidth than is available on 5Ghz. And if you're in the same room, might as well just use Ethernet
1
Jan 05, 2025 05:30 PM
9 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
rbdchiJan 05, 2025 05:30 PM
9 Posts
Quote from Nintendo1474 :
Probably the MLO and the preamble puncturing. 6Ghz only works if you're in the same room as the router, and doesn't help unless you're actively using more bandwidth than is available on 5Ghz. And if you're in the same room, might as well just use Ethernet
In my immediate area, the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands are completely congested. So, the benefit of 6 GHz for now is an open lane. Although, just like any highway, it's only a matter of time that also fills up. 😀 Agreed that the higher frequency means that the signal doesn't travel as far. But, having devices tethered to Ethernet while in a family room, for example, isn't really convenient for my specific use case.
1
Jan 05, 2025 06:23 PM
701 Posts
Joined Mar 2023
SlicknSilentJan 05, 2025 06:23 PM
701 Posts
Quote from smohan123 :
Nice call-out. It's very frustrating that WiFi 7 seems to have multiple definitions to different companies. It strikes me as some form of duplicity in calling the top line feature "WiFi 7" without also mentioning the lack of important other features which may constitute the setup being functionally slower than someone's current setup.

Very confusing to the consumer. Seems to me that the major thing to look for is support for 2.4/5/6 GHz bands with MLO. Without all of those, together, it is probably that one would be better off sticking to their current WiFi 6 or 6e setups. Especially given the typical high prices on "WiFi 7" offerings.
IMHO, all these standards (Wifi, Bluetooth, HDMI, usb, etc..) are getting more confusing on purpose. I believe, the manufacturers pushed the entities develping these standards to remove most of the restrictions so they can advertise their products as complaint with minimal upgrades. Most customers don't/can't research enough before buying.
Jan 09, 2025 01:03 PM
20 Posts
Joined Apr 2024
Neomagic100Jan 09, 2025 01:03 PM
20 Posts
Does anyone know if IoT network support means IoT devices don't have access to rest of network, but the rest of the network does access to IoT devices?

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