Amazon has 3-Pack TP-Link Deco XE75 AXE5400 Tri-Band WiFi 6E Mesh System for $249.99 - $30 when you 'redeem' the coupon on product page or apply promo code 30XE753PK at checkout = $219.99. Shipping is free.
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Amazon has 3-Pack TP-Link Deco XE75 AXE5400 Tri-Band WiFi 6E Mesh System for $249.99 - $30 when you 'redeem' the coupon on product page or apply promo code 30XE753PK at checkout = $219.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for posting this deal.
Note: You must be logged in to clip coupons; coupons are typically for one-time use. Get 20% back on amount charged to a Prime Visa card.
Model: TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band WiFi 6E Mesh System(Deco XE75) - Covers up to 7200 Sq.Ft, Replaces WiFi Router and Extender, AI-Driven Mesh, New 6GHz Band, 3-Pack
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I had the eeros and moved to the ones on this deal. My eeros suddenly got "stuck" in a congested channel which I could not manually change. Lots of forums talking about this which you can catch up on
The TPs don't have the manual setting either but do have a network optimization button to try and scan the airways and adjust. No option on eero 6 since it's supposed to be smart enough to do on its own. Additionally, TP is starting to add the manual option to some of their routers.
Another deciding factor for me was that these TP have 6ghz channel for the back channel if you intend to have them connect via wifi.
They've been great for my use case. It's an out of box solution for average customers
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Looks like they are just working around the concerns that it is a Chinese company by registering a company in the US and still doing all development in China. TP-Link products are still very much Chinese.
They are in the process of transferring all assets to a new parent company which will be the global company based out of California. People who have no clue about this process think its as simple as registering a company, when in reality this costs 100's of million of dollars and thousands of hours of labor... Also for those that are actually knowledgeable would know that a huge chunk of their products are already being produced in Vietnam and Brazil and not just CHINA.
Also if the US was still serious about this they would not be offering their products on military bases, not to mention TP-Link just got accepted into CISA Secure. So yeah good to be really informed instead of just parroting uninformed articles or out of date articles.
Can you clarify what you mean by their IoT network? I have about a dozen device on it and they work just fine.
Are they on the segregated IoT network? I have deco X3600, XE5300, x50 outdoor and M9 pluses..
They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
They are in the process of transferring all assets to a new parent company which will be the global company based out of California. People who have no clue about this process think its as simple as registering a company, when in reality this costs 100's of million of dollars and thousands of hours of labor... Also for those that are actually knowledgeable would know that a huge chunk of their products are already being produced in Vietnam and Brazil and not just CHINA. Also if the US was still serious about this they would not be offering their products on military bases, not to mention TP-Link just got accepted into CISA Secure. So yeah good to be really informed instead of just parroting uninformed articles or out of date articles.
OK, got it - we should just trust you instead of the articles.
Now please, before you parrot useless and out of date information, make sure your still current before you chime in with almost two year old information.
Are they on the segregated IoT network? I have deco X3600, XE5300, x50 outdoor and M9 pluses..
They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
Turn on guest network, put them all on guest network, problem solved.
Turn on guest network, put them all on guest network, problem solved.
Then what do I use when I have guests? If I'm paying for a device that has a feature that doesn't work I'd much rather get one that does instead of using a work around. I now use another brand for my my IoT device's
Then what do I use when I have guests? If I'm paying for a device that has a feature that doesn't work I'd much rather get one that does instead of using a work around. I now use another brand for my my IoT device's
I get that, your paying money for it so you want it to work. But you can also have the guests join the guest network too. I have never used the IoT functionality on either my m9+ or my X60 when I had them so I cant speak to it, but its a very rarely used feature by the sounds of it and from the reviews I looked through no one seems to test or use that functionality so hard to comment on. I am guessing its something wrong with the Mesh kit, but cant say for sure.
Also some of the TP-Link models allow you to create up to 2 guest networks so another possible solution.
I get that, your paying money for it so you want it to work. But you can also have the guests join the guest network too. I have never used the IoT functionality on either my m9+ or my X60 when I had them so I cant speak to it, but its a very rarely used feature by the sounds of it and from the reviews I looked through no one seems to test or use that functionality so hard to comment on. I am guessing its something wrong with the Mesh kit, but cant say for sure.
Also some of the TP-Link models allow you to create up to 2 guest networks so another possible solution.
It's cool and I've accepted it. I got in on the previous linksys velop slickdeal and I use it for my IoT network with no issue
Why don't you spend some time reading this article published today (April 25th) - hopefully, that is not out of date for you. https://arstechnica.com/tech-poli...stigation/
"TP-Link was split into two entities, one based in the US and one based in China, Bloomberg wrote, but the "US-based entity being scrutinized by Justice and Commerce Department officials still has substantial operations in mainland China." Another Bloomberg article earlier this month described how TP-Link still has a sizable presence in China."
Does anyone know if I have an existing tp link deco mesh system if all the devices will transfer by account to the new system?I hate to have to setup every device individually all over again.
Set the SSID, password, and auth protocol all the same. Your devices don't care about router brand
Why don't you spend some time reading this article published today (April 25th) - hopefully, that is not out of date for you. https://arstechnica.com/tech-poli...stigation/
"TP-Link was split into two entities, one based in the US and one based in China, Bloomberg wrote, but the "US-based entity being scrutinized by Justice and Commerce Department officials still has substantial operations in mainland China." Another Bloomberg article earlier this month described how TP-Link still has a sizable presence in China."
The only thing that the arstechnica article helped point out is that it was NEVER ABOUT SPYWARE, it was always about price. Turns out when you got lobbyist complaining that they cant charge more for their gear cause TP-Link is selling fairly, you just pay off your congressmen to smear and investigate. As for still having a sizeable presence in China no DUH, you know how long it takes to do a deinvesture, as someone who has participated in a $7 billion dollar deinvesture process it can take well over 2+ years to get everything fully seperated. They literally just started the process late last 2024, lol.
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Are they on the segregated IoT network? I have deco X3600, XE5300, x50 outdoor and M9 pluses..
They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
Actually, they are on the segregated IoT network. So far the only issue I have was trying to add a 2.4GHz device and I have to convert the 2.4GHz and 5GHz mixed network to 2.4GHz only.
Overall I have not had any other issues (well, one of my Ethernet port on one of the device stopped working...haha).
Top Comments
The TPs don't have the manual setting either but do have a network optimization button to try and scan the airways and adjust. No option on eero 6 since it's supposed to be smart enough to do on its own. Additionally, TP is starting to add the manual option to some of their routers.
Another deciding factor for me was that these TP have 6ghz channel for the back channel if you intend to have them connect via wifi.
They've been great for my use case. It's an out of box solution for average customers
54 Comments
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Also if the US was still serious about this they would not be offering their products on military bases, not to mention TP-Link just got accepted into CISA Secure. So yeah good to be really informed instead of just parroting uninformed articles or out of date articles.
Are they on the segregated IoT network? I have deco X3600, XE5300, x50 outdoor and M9 pluses..
They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
https://slashdot.org/story/25/04/...from-china
https://finance.yahoo.c
https://www.cnet.com/home/interne...-weigh-in/
https://www.cepro.com/news/tp-lin...ny/617088/
Now please, before you parrot useless and out of date information, make sure your still current before you chime in with almost two year old information.
They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
Then what do I use when I have guests? If I'm paying for a device that has a feature that doesn't work I'd much rather get one that does instead of using a work around. I now use another brand for my my IoT device's
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Also some of the TP-Link models allow you to create up to 2 guest networks so another possible solution.
Also some of the TP-Link models allow you to create up to 2 guest networks so another possible solution.
It's cool and I've accepted it. I got in on the previous linksys velop slickdeal and I use it for my IoT network with no issue
https://arstechnica.com/tech-poli...stigatio
"TP-Link was split into two entities, one based in the US and one based in China, Bloomberg wrote, but the "US-based entity being scrutinized by Justice and Commerce Department officials still has substantial operations in mainland China." Another Bloomberg article earlier this month described how TP-Link still has a sizable presence in China."
I hate to have to setup every device individually all over again.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-poli...stigatio
"TP-Link was split into two entities, one based in the US and one based in China, Bloomberg wrote, but the "US-based entity being scrutinized by Justice and Commerce Department officials still has substantial operations in mainland China." Another Bloomberg article earlier this month described how TP-Link still has a sizable presence in China."
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They all work in bridge mode for normal mesh wifi operation. But there is a toggle setting that allows you to create another network SSID to use for IoT device's.
This network doesn't work and is unreliable. It constantly drops the connection and the speed is about 5Mbps when connected.
I have isolated and verified this problem by isolating the network SSID and only connecting my cellphone to it. I also removed all M9 plus decos since it doesn't support IoT network and the problem remains.
It sucks because I have bought the outdoor unit x50 and can't use it for my needs. Now of course I can just name the main SSID to what my IoT device's use and it would work but that's not the feature I that I was looking for and wanted a segregated IoT network.
Overall I have not had any other issues (well, one of my Ethernet port on one of the device stopped working...haha).