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Plume - SuperPod with WiFi 6

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1
Positive
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Dmtammaro β€’ 12 months ago

I was also an early adopter. I switched because they had a device limit and it tanked my network. I miss that setup sometimes. It was definitely the best (to me) with handling the 2.5 & 5 ghz networks and 2.4 only home devices. Never had an issue with the devices connecting and staying connected. I have many issues with my velop set up. I want to switch again but can’t justify a change after spending 1k on the velop system.

r/HomeKit β€’ Best Mesh WiFi for HomeKit ->
Negative
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lwadbe β€’ 12 months ago

Plume. Was an early adopter and was grandfathered into the original subscription, but the terms were getting onerous, and at least one of my APs was going bad due to poor thermal management. The main draw of Plume was the great phone support, so if I'm out of town, and stuff goes bad, I knew my family could get things running again. Support went to hell though, so ...

r/HomeKit β€’ Best Mesh WiFi for HomeKit ->
Positive
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noceboy β€’ 7 months ago

Plume. I was a beta tester in 2017. I had to sign a nda. I started with Pods. Later I received Super Pods. Still using a mix of them. Two Pods are defective. Still using 8. Still working well (my Wi-FI seems to be more stable than the Wi-FI of my colleagues). Never seen them sold where I live, though.

r/googlehome β€’ What Mesh Wifi Is Everyone Using ? ->
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noceboy β€’ 7 months ago

Plume. I was a beta tester in 2017. I had to sign a nda. I started with Pods. Later I received Super Pods. Still using a mix of them. Two Pods are defective. Still using 8. Still working well (my Wi-FI seems to be more stable than the Wi-FI of my colleagues). Never seen them sold where I live, though.

r/googlehome β€’ What Mesh Wifi Is Everyone Using ? ->
Positive
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tollforturning β€’ 8 months ago

Depends on how much you know and want to know. Assuming you're a typical home user, key thing is having shaping effective on your router for upload and download. Other key factor is whether or not the mesh has dedicated backhaul channels, meaning that the wireless backhauls aren't sharing radio with your end devices. Other factor is how intelligent the mesh network is as a whole in terms of optimization of radio configurations and states as a whole set. I've been a network engineer on and off for 20 years, my go to when I'm asked to "help" a friend or acquaintance improve home wireless without investing a bunch of time is Plume superpods. They're tri-band, the implication being they have dedicated backhaul radios, and they adapt and auto-optimize radio selection and power across the whole set of pods in your home. It's a coherent whole.

r/HomeNetworking β€’ What is the Best WiFi Mesh System for Home? πŸ™πŸ™πŸ™πŸ™πŸ™ ->

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