About this deal
All the Ethernet ports are Gigabit, the rear-placed one being the PoE In port which powers up the TP-Link EAP615-Wall.
The slim case will easily blend in with the wall and if it wasn’t for the single LED at the bottom, you would hardly notice its presence. At 45 feet (-72dB attenuation), I saw an average of 276Mbps upstream and 115Mbps downstream, which is still very good for any type of application. Of course, both the TP-Link EAP610 and the EAP615-Wall support OFDMA, MU-MIMO and both can connect to the Omada controller.
WPA3 for worry-free open public networks: provides more data security for previously unsecured and open WiFi hotspots. And that’s pretty much the point of upgrading to WiFi 6 because you will see a proper difference when you have lots of compatible client devices connected to the AP.
Enterprise-class chipsets offer outstanding performance and support longer running time, higher client capacity and greater range. and features including OFDMA and MU-MIMO requires client devices to support the corresponding features. pci_driver_own_by_port: success to clear p=0 fw own, from(1): 1 is interrupt mode, 2 is polling mode. If you read the individual analysis of the TP-Link EAP610 and the EAP615-Wall, you know that I tested these two wireless access points in a very similar manner. It features 4 x gigabit ethernet ports with one downlink port supporting PoE pass-through to provide power for a wired device.
Removing the CPU cage provides access to JTAG pins, but this is NOT necessary for brick recovery and likely only interesting to bootloader/kernel hackers. The complete in-room WiFi coverage guarantees strong signals and corner-to-corner WiFi coverage in each room.