TP LINK DECO M5 ĐÁNH GIÁ

The TP-Link Deco M5 was the first WiFi system released by the Shenzhen-based company in an attempt to join the then-already established group of systems, which included the the Linksys Velop, the Google WiFi and the Netgear Orbi. The WiFi systems were and still are the hottest thing in the networking world (right next to the new 802.11ax) and every major manufacturer wanted to have its product on display. Some of the early solutions came from Eero, Ubiquiti, Luma and Open Mesh, but, as expected, the more popular networking manufacturers have jumped on the bandwagon and released their own versions of how a WiFi system should look and behave, which meant a radical increase in options, lots of interesting features and new implemented technologies, as well as a significant decrease of prices (with a fiercer competition, come better prices).

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Considering that it was a bit late to the party, the Deco M5 already had a fierce competition from the likes of Google WiFi (also a dual-band WiFi system), so it had to bring some novelty to the table and improve the WiFi system formula to actually become relevant and not just have a better price tag.

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The Google WiFi kept the dual-band setup, but brought the price down and implemented a very simple and minimalist setup and interface (while also being one of the best on a key necessity: the network stability); the Linksys Velop added a second 5GHz radio band so it could better handle clients and the backhaul traffic; the Netgear Orbi also has an additional 5GHz which is dedicated to the backhaul, while it rejected the mesh approach in favour for a main unit+satellites system (eventually it came around and now supports daisy-chain).

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Of course, there are better solutions out there: Linksys Velop uses three radio bands for both backhaul and client connection (and, of course, Ethernet backhaul), while the best solution so far comes from Netgear Orbi which dedicated an entire 5GHz radio band for backhaul and it paid off well, since two connected Orbi devices (main router + satellite) have pretty much the same wireless performance.