The real answer: both of those speeds are theoretical maximums that you’re unlikely to ever reach in real-world Wi-Fi use. The short but incomplete answer: 9.6 Gbps. It’ll still do the same basic thing - connect you to the internet - just with a bunch of additional technologies to make that happen more efficiently, speeding up connections in the process. Here’s what you should expect once it arrives. Wi-Fi 6 is just starting to arrive this year, and there’s a good chance it’ll be inside your next phone or laptop.
This is less of a one-time speed increase and more of a future-facing upgrade designed to make sure our speeds don’t grind to a halt a few years down the road. Its impact will be more nuanced, and we’re likely to see its benefits more and more over time. That’s great news: faster internet is constantly in demand, especially as we consume more bandwidth-demanding apps, games, and videos with our laptops and phones.īut the next generation of Wi-Fi, known as Wi-Fi 6, isn’t just a simple speed boost. No averaging or other combination of multiple fans is done by AIDA64.Wi-Fi is about to get faster. You can enable Extended Labels to clarify the generic sensor readings in the right-click context menu on the Computer / Sensor page.ģ) Chassis #3 is one of the fan headers located on your motherboard. If you still have doubts about its accuracy, compare the clock readings against CPU-Z or HWiNFO64.Ģ) It's difficult to tell, but most likely it is. Make sure to have XMP enabled in the BIOS Setup, and then check the DRAM frequency in AIDA64 again. And the patience for a 1st time builder.ġ) It depends on the actual DRAM frequency your memory modules are running at.
Sorry I keep running into things that I’m not sure about and aren’t exactly related to the title but you respond quickly. How exactly are is the fan speed calculated? Is it per fan added together or is it just an average of the three?Ĥ) would temperature #1 be the temp of the water in my kraken? Shouldn’t it be about ~2000? That’s what it says in the BIOS.Ģ) under the cooling fan section it says “pump #1” is that the kraken 圆2 pump?ģ) under cooling fans chassis #3 would that be my three exhaust fans I have on the top of my case? I have three Corsair ll120 connected to a commander pro. I have a couple more questions.ġ) my memory clock is displaying about 1067. BTW, you can enter a unit for the NIC download/upload rate items as "Mbps" to have Megabits/sec as the result. Since the difference is about eight-fold (8x), maybe you're mixing up MB/s (MegaBytes/sec) and Mbps (Megabits/sec) ? A network that can push 100 Megabits/sec can actually transfer 1/8 of that in MegaBytes/sec, so 12 MegaBytes/sec.
I’m still very new to pc building so if I have to ask basic questions, sorry about that. Move tried searching the forums and google before submitting this as to not wast anyone’s time but I couldn’t find anything. The same situation arises when looking at upload speed. My question is do I have a setting wrong? Why is there such a big difference. Net and it was saying I was getting around 100MB/s.
It ended up being NIC 6 and I changed the download rate to MB/s and it gave a reading but that reading was really low. So I put one in the panel and it didn’t work so I tried all the NIC options (1-6 for me).
I noticed that download/upload rate were an option. I’ve just built a new system and was putting together a sensor panel.