The vast majority of our reviews come from verified purchases. Reviews from customers may include My Best Buy members, employees, and Tech Insider Network members (as tagged). Select reviewers may receive discounted products, promotional considerations or entries into drawings for honest, helpful reviews.
Page 21 Showing 401-420 of 560 reviews
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Nice Wireless Adapter
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Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
Works well for those old desktop/laptops without 5ghz abilities.
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
Product works exactly as advertised. No issues thus far. Using it on a Dell desktop manufactured in 2020-21ish. We have Google Fiber and use Ubiquiti enterprise equipment internally including 6E wifi.
Works good, out-of-the-box driver support on Linux
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Posted .
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
Works good so far, I bought it for out-of-the-box kernel driver support on Linux, which it has, needs a relatively new kernel though. Speedtest says 300Mb/s though that's probably because I have it sitting on the floor.
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
It's at a higher price point than similar items. The adapter is bulky and can easily be kncked into if moving the device it is pluged into. Lastly, it created audio interface.
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
I’m only getting about 850 Mbps connected to my 6ghz network when i was expecting around 1700 mbps like my gaming pc gets with integrated wifi 6e. However, this is still a worthy upgrade for my 7 year old laptop that has wifi 5.
This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.
This was purchased to bypass a broken wifi driver, which it did! However there are some minor security issues where I will need to have a vpn active in order to access certain sites or programs, like Steam, and then turn the vpn off in order to access other sites, like airlines. Minor detail but enough to cause a bit of extra work for the user to figure it out in the first place.