


Send us your feedback: Use the form at the bottom of the page to share your opinions, thoughts, ideas, and suggestions for future episodes. See the section at the bottom of this page. Receive an automatic eMail reminder whenever a new episode is posted here (from ). To subscribe, use whichever service you prefer. You may download and listen to selected episodes from this page (see below), or subscribe to the ongoing series as an RSS "podcast" to have them automatically downloaded to you as they are produced. But as a work of extreme image manipulation, it came out surprisingly well.) It was created by a fan of the podcast using GIMP (similar to

Let's not be overly critical - speeds at 32.4MB/s downstream and 25.8MB/s upstream would represent very fast 802.11n performance, but we're using 802.11ac, so are simply expecting better.(This was not our idea. In a same-room scenario we were expecting reasonable speed, but as we suspected the loss of an antenna did hit throughput when contrasted with 450Mbps 802.11n. Driver installation is from a CD and went smoothly on our 64-bit Windows 7 installation. The Netgear A6200 does come with a basic desktop dock with a metre long cable, which should be long enough to enable you to get a good signal.

56 inches) with a 90-degree adjustable USB connector, while that black section rotates 90 degrees too. The device itself is a little larger than you'd expect, measuring about 95.3 x 31.4 x 14.3mm (3.75 x 1.23 x. So we can all see how the USB 2.0 design decision got made - hey it was crippled enough already, so it's not an issue any more. On the other hand, that's mostly academic, since the twin antennas will limit the throughput you're going to get to around 50MB/s in the best case.
