I cant believe it, somebody that actually knows how to do a review! this guy is the best I've seen so far, no BS clear speaking and to the point. no time wasted, I like him
Thanks Dong, that was very informative! No bull*** no added sugar. Just pure information and no unnecessary personal opinion, nor endlessly rambling for 10 minutes to get to the point. That's how it's supposed to be!
Let me clarify on a few things here. I can speak from experience when I say that, to an extent, a good quality modem and router combo can make a difference in the sense it can provide a much more stable and balanced internet connection. Especially across multiple devices. But, more importantly, it's much better than the hybrid modem and router that ISPs will try to make you use. And trust me those will actually hold you back regardless of your ISP speed... and they even charge you extra on your monthly bill for using the cruddy router they provide to you! My advice to everyone I talk to about ISPs is that they should ALWAYS opt to use their own modem and router instead of the ones that the ISPs provide!
not so boring if you need the info and its up to date, thats the main thing. Hearing this helps make some points of a new modem not so important. One thing not talked about is the ability for any particular modem to be a repeater making the router much more functional by having a broader area of coverage. This to me is just as important as how many devices at what speed it supports.
Man, me too! "I'm getting 40Mbps out of my wifi". Ma'am, you're paying for up to 50. "ya, why can't I can't 50?". Proceed to check ethernet and get 55. Well ma'am, my job here is done lol
Honestly this should be common knowledge know. Everyone has internet these days. And wired always get you closest to your isp advertised speed. Less switches the better. Though technically any device on wifi should be able to cap the basic isp speed. Even with older tech.
Thank! You get right to the point. There's no waiting for you to beat around the bush before you get to the meat of the information we want to hear. Thanks for a great and to the point review.
Obstacles are a huge factor in blocking signals. This is especially true in a lot of 1960-1890 homes. The walls can stop signals dead in their tracks. I've experienced this, my old home that was an multi family caused the wifi to barely reach the kitchen when the kitchen was only 20-30 ft away. The new house with the same router can get strong signals 3x the distance compared to the old house.
You have to have fast internet - That's #1 on the list. I have 200 mbps for my Internet Speed from my local cable company. Then you add a super fast Cable Internet Modem and add the super fast WiFI router = equals killer speed. Plus use ethernet internet cables for your gaming systems and computers for gaming etc. etc. Use the wifi signal just for casual use like web browsing - nothing hardcore.
Wyatt Sexton I have played loads of multiplayer games on WiFi and it was as good as it was on Ethernet for any practical purpose. I have no idea why you would need a higher speed tier for your broadband service either. Most games use very little data when compared with streaming video, or even audio files. The key is to get your latency to within an acceptable range for gaming with little to no packet loss or collisions, and most home modems and routers today are so powerful and loaded with customizable networking features that almost anyone can accomplish this over WiFi with a modest amount of effort and know-how. There are other factors I could go into as well, but the bottom line is Ethernet is nice, but it is not a necessity for competitive gaming anymore, and it hasn’t been for years at this point.
The answer is it depends. If your device's wireless NIC supports newer wifi standards than your current router does, then obtaining a router that uses those standards will likely improve your wifi connectivity. This is dependent on all things being egual in terms of broadcast strength and so on, and that is almost never the case. If not, then a newer router may still make improvements to your network security and broadcast quality. It may also be somewhat, or perhaps even significantly faster due to iterative hardware improvements and other software factors that are too numerous to mention here. It all depends on what router you have and what you are intending to implement.
No, you want to get the best router you can so it is future proof. Tech improves fast. So when your next device (phone, PC...etc) has the ability to handle more mbps your router can give it to it. Don't go cheap on a router...he forgot to mention that routers should outlast your devices for the most part...hence your router should be ready for the next up and coming device needs. Hope that makes sense.
Funny, I just bought my dad a Netgear Nighthawk AC3200 router for Father's Day since his old router died and he had no internet... But he keeps complaining that his ancient Windows Vista PC connected via WiFi is still slow. I tried to explain to him that the router isn't the problem; the connection is only as fat as the weakest (slowest) link which is his archaic PC (which he refuses to party with) that has an 802.11b WIFI card. So I'm definitely sending him a link to this video. Thank you! Very simple, informative and easy even for a stubborn old dad to understand. LOL
THIS GUY IS AWESOME!!!..I Use Cnet for Practically ALL my Reviews when it comes to Our TV's or Laptops or Even Routers. I'll ALWAYS find it funny when people use Consumer Report for their "COMPARING"...lol.
You are not getting the speed advertised by ISP? Switch to Ethernet. WIFI will always be slower if you live in an apartment. Walls, furnitures, household gadgets are the major factor.
for a while I was stuck with 802.11n and got an AC router. I would have gotten an AX but they are still very expensive. I also don't like draft specs because they are slower than expected. My internet is 100 megabits so if I can at least get that or close over WiFi I am happy. You won't need a very expensive router to get that. From a distance it might drop off some but that is still not too bad unless you are in a really large house.
You NAILED IT! I bought the NETGEAR Night Hawk x10 and I don’t see any speed difference! Amazon still lags and buffers and router is 10ft away from the TV! I think that I pay for 100mb for Spectrum Internet! Also any information on how to Flash a Night Hawk to install IPVanish? Thank You
Fastest link speed ive seen was between my ac1600 (ngear r6250) router and a ac3000 (ex8000) range extender going at a blazing speed of 1200mbps. And i believe it too, ftps of around 50-80mB/s through a GigE from range extender tool my desktop. From my living room about 15m away through a few walls.
He didn't say that. You should buy the best router that you can afford. He is stating that you should be aware of what you get due to your device and be educated to the way it works. See, you want your router to last a long time so you don't have to buy another one every couple years to match your future devices. You don't know how many mbps your next devices can handle... so, you want a router that can handle future devices giving you the ability to get the best speed from them (and trust me you will need it the way things advance). If you buy the cheap router and your next smart phone can handle a lot more mbps than your router won't be able to give it what it needs to run its best. Speed norms are moving fast....you want a to buy a router that will handle several years of new, more powerful devices. You want to maximize your devices so you need a router that will handle them...everything is moving to streaming so your router is going to be the hub everything runs off of...so get a good one.
God dammit this guy is literally the best reviewer in Cnet, 0 bulshit and all good info.
Surprising coming from cnet, right?
More like best reviewer period. If Dong Ngo had his own channel/show i'd sub right away
Brian Cooley, Dong Ngo, and Bridget Carrey are why I am subscribed to Cnet
agreed!
I agree..
I cant believe it, somebody that actually knows how to do a review! this guy is the best I've seen so far, no BS clear speaking and to the point. no time wasted, I like him
Respect The Dong, best reviewer on CNET.
Dong squad
I don't know why but I can trust Dong Ngo with my life!
The Dong is the best reviewer at CNET
Thanks Dong, that was very informative!
No bull*** no added sugar. Just pure information and no unnecessary personal opinion, nor endlessly rambling for 10 minutes to get to the point. That's how it's supposed to be!
I just lucked into this review by chance. I'm searching for a new router, as the old one just died from a line surge. Great advice. Thank you!
more Dong please CNET
forget the rest !!!
JJ G I have a feeling this is not the first time you've asked for more Dong. 😕
Let me clarify on a few things here. I can speak from experience when I say that, to an extent, a good quality modem and router combo can make a difference in the sense it can provide a much more stable and balanced internet connection. Especially across multiple devices. But, more importantly, it's much better than the hybrid modem and router that ISPs will try to make you use. And trust me those will actually hold you back regardless of your ISP speed... and they even charge you extra on your monthly bill for using the cruddy router they provide to you! My advice to everyone I talk to about ISPs is that they should ALWAYS opt to use their own modem and router instead of the ones that the ISPs provide!
Leave it to Ngo to keep cnet alive
I want this dudes voice on an audio book bruh
Oh god not... It's broken English....
me too Samurai
Odorous Smegma sounds hot
kinky
or on a waze navigation...hahaha
Could you do more of these. I love learning about how to optimize a wifi connection but it just a boring topic to read about.
Umm he didn't really give much useful info regarding "optimizing" a wi-fi connection speed that most of us users don't already know.
Just go and watch LTT aka Linus Tech Tips
not so boring if you need the info and its up to date, thats the main thing. Hearing this helps make some points of a new modem not so important. One thing not talked about is the ability for any particular modem to be a repeater making the router much more functional by having a broader area of coverage. This to me is just as important as how many devices at what speed it supports.
Dong, you should link the article in the video description to make it easy for us non Dong Ngo to find.
☺
I work for a ISP and I swear I have to explain this all day long
I work for an ISP and I sell this router after wholesaling it
Man, me too! "I'm getting 40Mbps out of my wifi". Ma'am, you're paying for up to 50. "ya, why can't I can't 50?". Proceed to check ethernet and get 55. Well ma'am, my job here is done lol
ISP gear sucks always disconnects BT hubs are shit why do you think we always buy 3rd party routers because they are reliable vs the shit you give us
simple to explain - different size pipes carrying water.
Honestly this should be common knowledge know. Everyone has internet these days. And wired always get you closest to your isp advertised speed. Less switches the better. Though technically any device on wifi should be able to cap the basic isp speed. Even with older tech.
Honestly I watch tech reviewers all over youtube. THIS GUY IS AWESOME!!! Loose your job at CNET and start your own channel Dong.
This dudes the man!!! He gives it to you like it is. No sales pitch, thank you.
i wish i had his smooth delivery style
Go Dong!
Only the creatively genius mind of Dong Ngo could come up with a title like that.
The most useful, and indeed the only useful explanation I have ever heard about wifi speed. Thanks
Finally someone that tells it like it is. Listen to this guy. Great video sir.
I swear I was waiting for him to say “mm’kay”
CNET please give us more DONG! We just can't get enough
We love dong
Hidden driver, I agree, this guy is the BEST reviewer. Just the important info, no BS!!!
Thank! You get right to the point. There's no waiting for you to beat around the bush before you get to the meat of the information we want to hear.
Thanks for a great and to the point review.
I never thought that i would like Dong, you changed my mind.
Best description regarding WiFi capability that I have heard! Great review Dong!
I love how 2533 becomes 2600 and not 2500. Thank you, Marketing.
Dong Ngo, more like Dong NGOAT🔥🔥💯💯
Awesome Name + Awesome Personality + Very Knowledgeable + Awesome Reviewer = Dong Ngo
Dong No always speaks the truth and often there is more to learn than just the topic at hand...
Bro. Loved you in Dexter. Great work.
wasn't that C.S. Lee ... haha
@@kushalthapa3548 racism isn’t funny
@@0vereasy I am correcting ben, if you read my comment precisely
That's a honest man.
Wow! Thank you! This guy's name is Dong Ngo..... kinda like DONGLE.... Holy crap! This guy was born for tech, it's even in his name! Great video!
this guy's the best reviewer on CNET fire everyone else and let this guy take over
You're the wisest guy in tech, Dong Ngo!
Without Dong Ngo, CNET will never be the same.
“At a time” love this guy.
Obstacles are a huge factor in blocking signals. This is especially true in a lot of 1960-1890 homes. The walls can stop signals dead in their tracks. I've experienced this, my old home that was an multi family caused the wifi to barely reach the kitchen when the kitchen was only 20-30 ft away. The new house with the same router can get strong signals 3x the distance compared to the old house.
You have to have fast internet - That's #1 on the list. I have 200 mbps for my Internet Speed from my local cable company. Then you add a super fast Cable Internet Modem and add the super fast WiFI router = equals killer speed. Plus use ethernet internet cables for your gaming systems and computers for gaming etc. etc. Use the wifi signal just for casual use like web browsing - nothing hardcore.
Wyatt Sexton I have played loads of multiplayer games on WiFi and it was as good as it was on Ethernet for any practical purpose. I have no idea why you would need a higher speed tier for your broadband service either. Most games use very little data when compared with streaming video, or even audio files.
The key is to get your latency to within an acceptable range for gaming with little to no packet loss or collisions, and most home modems and routers today are so powerful and loaded with customizable networking features that almost anyone can accomplish this over WiFi with a modest amount of effort and know-how.
There are other factors I could go into as well, but the bottom line is Ethernet is nice, but it is not a necessity for competitive gaming anymore, and it hasn’t been for years at this point.
The answer is it depends. If your device's wireless NIC supports newer wifi standards than your current router does, then obtaining a router that uses those standards will likely improve your wifi connectivity. This is dependent on all things being egual in terms of broadcast strength and so on, and that is almost never the case.
If not, then a newer router may still make improvements to your network security and broadcast quality. It may also be somewhat, or perhaps even significantly faster due to iterative hardware improvements and other software factors that are too numerous to mention here.
It all depends on what router you have and what you are intending to implement.
Man this video was really helpful and informative. Seems like we can save all the money for the expensive routers.
Review The Cheapest seems like a 30 dollar router will just do
No, you want to get the best router you can so it is future proof. Tech improves fast. So when your next device (phone, PC...etc) has the ability to handle more mbps your router can give it to it. Don't go cheap on a router...he forgot to mention that routers should outlast your devices for the most part...hence your router should be ready for the next up and coming device needs. Hope that makes sense.
I love this guys voice! At 1:36 we have the "At a time" Western accent :'D and that made me sub!
Thanks, so refreshing to listen to straight to the point no bs person.
Yeah! I have to agree the best reviewer bar none! Keeps it so simply and easy to understand.
Dong... you really nail it regarding the client vs the claim of the device. Cheers. I’ll buy you a beer if I ever meet you.
Thanks CNET for making a very practical video.
Link to the article please.
Love the style bud...thanks for the no-nonsense presentation.
I like this guy's confidence!
In Dong we trust!
probably the most egit how-to / explanation i've watched in awhile. keeping it 100!!!
Who is this guy? Anyway, I love him! Bring us more of him, CNet! A straight-shooter with a sense of humour - yep, I love it.
Thank you for this. Certainly explains why my new router isn’t as fast as what I thought it would be.
I know very little about networking but this guy broke it down well. Thanks.
Awesome Review! I'm subscribing just because of your no nonsense review.
Haven't clicked on cnet for a while in my subscriptions. I saw Dong Ngo. Here I am.
Just like cowbell, we all know, we need more Dong.
yup
This is how you review things. Respect. Thank you
After all this years and Mazuka still rocks out, man!!! I wonder if he miss Dexter
about time you did this DN.. ppl think fsster router means fast everything
Very straight forward, clear, concise explanation. Well done.
Don't stop, Dong. You're fuckin hilarious. Also -- concise, which is real nice.
Wow, you just answered a lot if my questions, plus even future questions I may have. Thank you !!!
Need more Dong Ngo videos!!
Wow! Thank you so much for a thorough and easy to understand explanation.
Thank you for simple explanation on router speeds; this helped a lot.
I'm just here for the legend, Dong "Gang Bang" Ngo
Really miss him in CNET.
Funny, I just bought my dad a Netgear Nighthawk AC3200 router for Father's Day since his old router died and he had no internet... But he keeps complaining that his ancient Windows Vista PC connected via WiFi is still slow. I tried to explain to him that the router isn't the problem; the connection is only as fat as the weakest (slowest) link which is his archaic PC (which he refuses to party with) that has an 802.11b WIFI card. So I'm definitely sending him a link to this video. Thank you! Very simple, informative and easy even for a stubborn old dad to understand. LOL
I have at&t internet and it’s not so good, there’s like 8 to 12 devices connected to it . What can i do to improve the speed?
I love it when he says time
Best review I've ever seen!. Didn't feel I was watching a router comercial like most of the videos here in youtube.
Subscribe and like
the Dong can never be wrong
Please do more of these!
THIS GUY IS AWESOME!!!..I Use Cnet for Practically ALL my Reviews when it comes to Our TV's or Laptops or Even Routers. I'll ALWAYS find it funny when people use Consumer Report for their "COMPARING"...lol.
This guys is hilarious and very informative. Definitely will follow his suggestions.
I wonder if Dong Ngo would ever consider doing a vlogging series
Facts, not fluff!, I love it! Can you do a video on Routers vs. Wifi extenders? Thanks
THANK YOU... This really helps me understand how this all works. Thanks again for what is real.
You are not getting the speed advertised by ISP? Switch to Ethernet. WIFI will always be slower if you live in an apartment. Walls, furnitures, household gadgets are the major factor.
I Dong Ngo before, but now I do! Props to CNET for some diversity!
this video will save me hours of conversations!
for a while I was stuck with 802.11n and got an AC router. I would have gotten an AX but they are still very expensive. I also don't like draft specs because they are slower than expected. My internet is 100 megabits so if I can at least get that or close over WiFi I am happy. You won't need a very expensive router to get that. From a distance it might drop off some but that is still not too bad unless you are in a really large house.
Very thoughtful and informative! I found these facts in the hard way. I wish I found this video a lot earlier....
A useful video from CNET. I must be dreaming....
AC twenty "sick" hundred router 😭
Twenty sick megabits wow that's fast!
:-)
That's so sick!
Alam Ashraful huh?
iPhone sick
How well do you speak manderin ????
Which modem and router should I buy for xfinity? I am reading buying separate devices is better than combo
That was awesome. Great personality too. I trust him.
Got the Xiaomi HD Pro Router. Best $70 spent. Aluminum casing, 1 TB storage and very stable 2.4 and 5ghz
You NAILED IT! I bought the NETGEAR Night Hawk x10 and I don’t see any speed difference! Amazon still lags and buffers and router is 10ft away from the TV!
I think that I pay for 100mb for Spectrum Internet! Also any information on how to Flash a Night Hawk to install IPVanish?
Thank You
Good information and an excellent speaker. Pull back the curtains!
Another great video Mr Ngo
The best Dong on e internet
Dong for president 2020.
Great video man! I had no idea my phone had a max ceiling speed. Now I just need to find out what it is. Lol
Dong is good
Fastest link speed ive seen was between my ac1600 (ngear r6250) router and a ac3000 (ex8000) range extender going at a blazing speed of 1200mbps. And i believe it too, ftps of around 50-80mB/s through a GigE from range extender tool my desktop. From my living room about 15m away through a few walls.
I appreciate your comment that "the slowest device determines the actual speed." Therefore, don't waste your money on an expensive faster moden.
He didn't say that. You should buy the best router that you can afford. He is stating that you should be aware of what you get due to your device and be educated to the way it works. See, you want your router to last a long time so you don't have to buy another one every couple years to match your future devices. You don't know how many mbps your next devices can handle... so, you want a router that can handle future devices giving you the ability to get the best speed from them (and trust me you will need it the way things advance). If you buy the cheap router and your next smart phone can handle a lot more mbps than your router won't be able to give it what it needs to run its best. Speed norms are moving fast....you want a to buy a router that will handle several years of new, more powerful devices. You want to maximize your devices so you need a router that will handle them...everything is moving to streaming so your router is going to be the hub everything runs off of...so get a good one.
He was talking about WiFi speeds but the hardwire speeds should be almost what your ISP speeds say.
Is it better to have a all in one mode router, or to have two separate devices, and does it affect the speed?
The Dong is the man!
Dong Ngo 2016!!