It operates on both the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands and offers a theoretical maximum throughput of 600 Mbit/s. While that sounds slow compared to modern Gigabit wireless standards, for browsing, streaming 1080p video, and standard office work, 802.11n is still perfectly viable today.
system_profiler SPAirPortDataType | grep -i "supported phy" 802 11n nic driver
In the world of wireless networking, we are currently obsessed with Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7. But there is a workhorse that still powers a massive chunk of home and office networks: . It operates on both the 2
Today, we are diving deep into the world of the : what it does, why it breaks, and how to fix it. But there is a workhorse that still powers
iw list | grep -A 10 "Supported interface modes" ethtool -i wlan0 iw dev wlan0 get phy iw phy phy0 info | grep -A 5 "HT capabilities"
How do you know if your 802.11n NIC driver is the culprit behind your connectivity woes? Look for these signs: