Heads Up :
The post you are writing will appear in a public forum. Please ensure all content is appropriate for public consumption. Review the employee guidelines for the community here.
If the nomenclature is x:y:z, where x = transmitters, y = receivers, and z = spatial streams, and the 1262 is 2:3:2 (two TX, three RX, 2 streams), then what is a 3602 ?I've seen both 4:4:3 and 3:4:3. Are there three or 4 transmitters ? I get there ...
Setup: Microsoft DC and Exchange server on inside. Microsoft OWA (Web access) server in DMZ. Outside DNS is not same as DC inside.Problem: While outside users can access OWA just fine, inside clients can not access by name, only by hard IP address.At...
Will there be an ability to run Wi-Fi 6 greenfield in the exisiting 2.4 & 5 GHz bands ? My example is I would like to move all my existing clients to 5 GHz, and run Wi-Fi 6 greenfield at 2.4 (or vice versa).
Does that then mean that when beamforming to an 802.11n client, there will be two streams, beamformed, thus 4 transmitters, but you won't be able to beamform 3 streams ?That at least would make sense to me.
OK - so what does the 4th transmitter do. If you have three spatial streams, then the 4th transmitter can't augment any one stream because that would cause an imbalance.I can see where the 4th transmitter might be used for legacy beamforming, but wha...