- Cheap
- Chinese when setting it up Weak wifi. Through the wire, it can give a good connection of 300-310 Mbps, just like the provider's tariff, through the wireless it is weak, the phone during the test is behind one wall of concrete 20 cm thick, there is a wooden door, it does not save.
- Not
- Does not work
- Price (took for 2 thousand) 2network bands (5 and 2 GHz) and gigabit ports Stylish and lightweight, looks trendy An interesting system for monitoring the operation of the router at shows the speed, you can turn off clients, you can see everyone who iscomnnected and whocomnsumes how much Internet A powerful antenna (I finish it on the street from the 4th floor - it catches in the yard at a distance of about 30-40 meters) Gives a speed of 5 GHz 92 MB (with 100 MB declared by the operator) There are a lot of videos on the Internet for setting up thenetwork, even in Chinese
- Software only in Chinese I tried to set it up through the application, but it didn’t work out, so I had to do everything manually through Google Chrome and the translator (it took 5 minutes) everything is intuitively clear even without translation The plug is Chinese (an adapter is needed), and therefore it may look bulky at the connection point (but it all depends on the adapter - I have a very small one)
- Setup that is quick and not overly complicated Coexistence of activity on both frequencies at the same time
- Power of the signal Not capable of being hung on the wall
- Not
- The erroneous version, 100 Mbps, was delivered.
- For the money, it works excellent! I set it up as a repeater in only five minutes (via a LAN cable from an ASUS router). Even a young child can use Google Chrome to translate web sites even though the firmware is in Chinese. An adapter for a Chinese plug was included. The software itself is straightforward, yet it performs a repeater's and even a home router's functions more than well.
- The adapter was "nominal," and it broke after only one use. Yet the retailer, not the router, should be the one to answer this.
- 2.4 GHz/5 GHz Wi-Fi network, design, and gigabit internet
- Few outlets for LAN, but many for the home
- Both the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands provide strong signals. The app allows for configuration and monitoring straight from the phone.
- Tambourine dancing accompanied by Chinese software updates. Download the MIWiFi add-on for your browser and set it up. There is no tv mount on the wall. built a super expensive mount (pictured)
- I decided to go with the most basic Xiaomi Mi 4A available, the Gigabit variant. That was 700 rials cheaper than its closest rival, which smacked of suspect pricing. I took a chance since, to me, a drink is not a drink.
- chanced it. The gigabit version is not included here. Our bright minds slapped a sticker reading "Xiaomi Mi 4A Gigabit Version" on the box of the router with 10M/100M bit speeds discovered between Chinese letters. After tambourines with the Chinese initial menu, replacing the Chinese adapter and installing a 2022 translator in Google Chrome, it turned out that 1000M was not in the WAN speed setting menu. Mom urged me to study Chinese,
- A year later, it still functions properly with speed, power, and a rapid setup using Chinese basic firmware. Rare dumps under load, but never a hang or performance decrease. I'm set to 470Mbps.
- Chinese version of "shop 18 pieces"
- Design, pricing, quality
- The atmosphere is Chinese.
- If only the structure
- Unrelated: Chinese language. You must dance while using a tambourine for it to work.
- Functions for a second day and has not yet lost its effectiveness.
- Arrival of the Chinese version
- attractive, slim. Stylish. Strong signal.
- not a wall mount. To hang the antennas on the screws from the old router, I had to tie wires to them. The price of an adaptor from a Chinese retailer, which comes to $100, must also be added to the bills. That wasn't a part of the.
- Cost and the number of gigabit ports.
- There is nothing that sets this router apart from others in its pricing range.