Here is my scenario I have production devices that need a static IP address. WiFi to Ethernet Bridge that allows Static clients? Networking.devices are still using WiFi 5 (and some even older as the OP) as their maximum supported, they should configure such a standard in a compatible mode (or offer such a compatible mode in addition to new standard only access which would require additional AP and probably separate SSID). Regensburga wrote:I also think it's stupid when IT teams just decide to roll out a new standard that leaves users of older devices out in the cold, without giving a proper amount of time to check for possible compatibility issuesĪs I mentioned above, it is not about deploying a new standard. I'm using this compatible mode without issues on my Asus RT-AX55 router as most of my devices are still limited to WiFi 5. The other one is incompatible and only supports WiFi 6 devices, offering the maximum of channels and bandwidth. One is compatible with WiFi 5 and offers less channels. WiFi 6 offers two different modes of encoding. A network Ethernet card requires an Ethernet network cable and does not support any WiFi standard.ĭa_Schmoo wrote:As soon as I disabled Wifi6 all the older devices could then see the SSIDs.īut it is worth looking deeper into WiFi 6. What is a RTTL8188EE network Ethernet card?Īs far as I understood Realtek, they have a PCIe WLAN network card RTL8188EE which supports up to WiFi 4 and is hence limited to 2.4 GHz band as Mike and others have written.I have an old laptop running on Fedora Linux that has a RTL8188EE network ethernet card.
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