My router supports Wi-Fi 6, but your computer isn't connected to it.
My router supports Wi-Fi 6, but your computer isn't connected to it.
Hello everyone, I have a router with Wi-Fi 6 and on my PC I have a TL-WN781ND Wi-Fi pci board. It turns out that the adapter does not even grab the frequency of 5Hz or Wi-Fi 6. I know that the Wi-Fi adapter is not the latest generation or high-end but I ask you, is there any way to update the Wi-Fi drivers to connect to Wi-Fi 6? Thank you very much in advance. Best regards.
Wouldn't life be wonderful if things could update instantly and everything functioned better? No.
Unexpectedly, you require a Wi-Fi 6 adapter. Your device supports 2.4GHz standards including 802.11n, 802.11g and 802.11b. You can purchase it here: https://www.tp-link.com/il/home-networki...ifications For more options, check this link: https://pcpartpicker.com/product/kCzFf7/...pce-ax58bt
I considered ax would drop down to b/g/N at least. It kind of forces the ax into a default, but I thought it’d be okay. *sigh*. I’ll need to sift through all my old files to see what’s really there. There might still be some b/g-only content hiding around.
802.11ax is simply 802.11ax regardless of frequency. You can use 802.11n on both 2.4GHz and 5GHz channels — the change isn't about the standard itself but about allowing downgrades from newer to older versions. The access point must support this transition, not the protocol name.
I interpreted it mainly in terms of the language aspect. To be more precise, I assumed most options would include something like a/b/g/N/ac/ax—possibly with 5GHz and 2.4GHz antennas. IIrc b/g/N devices usually lack either the 2.4 or 5GHz bands. I remember it was useful at one point because it was relatively fast, though it was quite slow and mostly unused.
802.11b and 802.11g are limited to the 2.4GHz frequency, whereas 802.11n supports both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands. The difference in speed can be confusing because 5GHz is still underused in many areas but offers significantly higher data rates compared to 2.4GHz, while 2.4GHz provides broader coverage but slower performance.