I can never get the speed that I've paid for
how are you testing? wifi or ethernet
SHAW an INTERNET service provider only provides internet and wifi is not the service. Check with a hardwired connection first then get back to us. And a propper speed test not fast.com or others
@abroome -- I can never get the speed that I've paid for
A few more details, please:
OK?
Bought 600 got 200 2020 MacBook Air and has the .11A, G, N, and the other numbers as well! My short cable is coaxial cable that's over 50 years old and I'm Wondering what is it maximal productivity
@abroome -- My short/Shaw cable is coaxial cable that's over 50 years old and I'm Wondering what is it maximal productivity.
Have you tried a different coaxial cable?
A coaxial cable connected into a Shaw TV box can simultaneously deliver literally hundreds of TV video/audio channels, plus 40+ channels of Stingray music -- that is a large capacity.
> 2020 MacBook Air and has the .11A, G, N,
From a web-site:
Below is a breakdown of the various 802.11 WiFi standards and their corresponding maximum speeds.
Theoretical wireless speeds (combined upstream and downstream) are as follows:
802.11b - 11 Mbps (2.4GHz)
802.11a - 54 Mbps (5 GHz)
802.11g - 54 Mbps (2.4GHz)
802.11n - 600 Mbps (2.4GHz and 5 GHz) - 150Mbps typical for network adapters, 300Mbps, 450Mbps, and 600Mbps speeds when bonding channels with some routers
802.11ac - 1300+Mbps (5 GHz) - newer standard that uses wider channels, QAM and spatial streams for higher throughput
So, if your computer is connecting via the "N" protocol, it is possible that you'll only see "150" speed.
For the record 802.11ac is not fastest wifi standard 802.11ax protocol is currently the fastest
802.11ax can deliver a single stream at 3.5Gbps, and with new multiplexing technology borrowed from the world of LTE cellular, can deliver four simultaneous streams to a single endpoint for a total theoretical bandwidth of an astounding 14Gbps.
If were being complet
@Tambora wrote:For the record 802.11ac is not fastest wifi standard 802.11ax protocol is currently the fastest
802.11ax can deliver a single stream at 3.5Gbps, and with new multiplexing technology borrowed from the world of LTE cellular, can deliver four simultaneous streams to a single endpoint for a total theoretical bandwidth of an astounding 14Gbps.
If were being complet
@Tambora thanks for that. Just to add my two cents, “ax” has now been changed to wifi 6. The new XB7 Gateways will be wifi 6 capable. Apparently the industry is going to a more marketable naming convention.
@abroome here is a little reading for you: https://www.netgear.com/images/pdf/DOCSIS31WhitePaper.pdf
Most certainly while the last mile to your house right up to your modem in fact. Shaw’s fibre network will provide you your internet signal. Docsis 3.1 routers will give the fast internet. You may want to check on your connection status, Shaw can do that. Fear not, Fibre>Coaxial>Docsis 3.1 will be around for a while.