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11000mbps is the maximum possible speed. If your home network does not have an external connection at that rate, your external speed will not be that high. Your internal connection will be able to hit that speed if you have compatible devices.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.11000 does not stand for 11000mb, this is a 1g router and lan ports, the WiFi follows the WiFi speeds for 2.4 and 5 g WiFi.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I'm generally skeptical about ads myself, so I'm not answering your question but instead agreeing with you. I relooked at the specs. I didn't see mention of 11,000 Gbps, I did see 5Gbps. Clearly there is some marketechture going on. Perhaps they are rating the internal through put of each connection as 2 simplex streams then adding up all the streams to add up to the impressive some. The import points to highlight are 1. The NIC card in our devices will never operate at either of those two speeds whether 11Gb or 5 Gb. 2. Even with link aggregation, a pair of links still doesn't add up to those speeds 3. The more important factor in 'high speed' is round trip delay between you and the other point serving you. If it's outside your home FORGET the speeds discussed hear. At best you'll experience 10% of these gross numbers, but more realistically see 1%-5% of that depending on how much you spend with you carrier. Agreeing with you...m
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