14 Jun 2024 11:02 AM - last edited: 14 Jun 2024 11:03 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
I'd add that Sky is now supplying the Max Hub as standard for all Ultrafast broadband connections because it's what they have stock of: the previous model was released in 2019.
The Max service brings Parental Controls which will be of value to some households.
14 Jun 2024 11:23 AM
My Ultrafast Plus (500) went live yesterday after moving from Virgin. Was sent the Sky Max Hub which surprised me as I didn't pay the extra.
Rock solid so far. Even better than my Google WiFi mesh that I had previously, including my outside camera doorbell.
Hear on the forum of horror stories but that's not been my case at all. Maybe the bricks in my house (semi detached 1930 odd) are made of dust, but the whole house is covered fine.
14 Jun 2024 11:29 AM - last edited: 14 Jun 2024 11:32 AM
So in reality there is no reason to have wifi max for those who have Q.
Thanks for the comments
14 Jun 2024 11:31 AM
@John+B1 have you considered asking if there's any point to you having Wi-Fi 6?
14 Jun 2024 11:36 AM
No, because there is if all the equiptment is compatable. Here the issue is Sky are offering WiFi max with old equipment which is not able to give you any of the features you may pay extra for.
14 Jun 2024 11:38 AM - last edited: 14 Jun 2024 11:45 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Robb0 wrote:
Was sent the Sky Max Hub which surprised me as I didn't pay the extra.
As I mentioned above, Sky is now supplying the Max Hub hardware unit for all new Ultrafast broadband connections: realistically it's likely that they just have more of those in stock than the 2019 Sky Broadband Hub which is the other FTTP-compatible model.
The WiFi Max service is an extra cost add-on: that includes the option to claim booster 'pods', the Parental Controls and (supposedly) 'AI-powered internet security'.
14 Jun 2024 11:38 AM
@John+B1 sarcasm is clearly not your strong point 🙄
14 Jun 2024 11:39 AM - last edited: 14 Jun 2024 12:53 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
You may be misunderstanding: the potential advantage is if any of the household equipment is WiFi 6. Hardware specified to that standard (802.11ax) gets the benefit of it from the Max Hub, while previous generation hardware does not and will connect as 802.11ac, 802.11n, 802.11g or whatever.
WiFi 6 is a set of hardware specification and software protocols: it's not something a user has to switch on or off.
14 Jun 2024 12:28 PM
Don't appreciate the comnent.
If you can't be polite and have nothing nice to say then don't comment.
These conversations don't have emotion in them. Only trying to find out info so all can benefit.
You don't seem to understand that concept.
14 Jun 2024 12:33 PM
Yes, I do understand that.
For my situation I need the other elements to be able to get wifi all over the house. Could not rely on the router alone. So the only point I could get wifi 6 would be off of the router.
So until Sky upgrade all the other Q components there is no real reason to have wifi max. I am sure though they will never do that. Thanks for your contribution . Much appreciated.
14 Jun 2024 12:50 PM - last edited: 14 Jun 2024 12:57 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@John+B1 wrote:
So until Sky upgrade all the other Q components there is no real reason to have wifi max. I am sure though they will never do that.
Q will become obsolete when satellite television broadcasting to the UK ceases: that's likely to happen before the end of this decade. This makes it extremely unlikely there will ever be a new Q hardware release, particularly as Sky under Comcast ownership now has Stream (which is WiFi 6 ; )
14 Jun 2024 01:42 PM
Completely agree.
14 Jun 2024 01:44 PM
@John+B1 you've already been told you kept repeating yourself by someone else though.
I'm sorry that my patience was running a bit thin with your impersonation of an African Grey Parrot, God forgive me 🙏
14 Jun 2024 01:54 PM
When someone can only contribute by criticism and insult. It says a lot about that person.
I need say nothing else.
14 Jun 2024 04:07 PM
@TimmyBGood wrote:
@John+B1 wrote:
So what's the point of having wifi max in the first place?
Recent wireless devices are WiFi 6: 802.11ac chipset manufacturing has basically ceased.
The specification for Q is eight years old.
Wireless chipsets for 802.11ac are still in production and the Sky Max Pods use that standard, 802.11ac so what are you talking about regarding manufacturing ceased? 😉
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