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fatihso

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Posts posted by fatihso

  1. On 2/6/2024 at 6:05 PM, PasKy said:

    ... when certain statements are made I always wonder if we read the specifications issued by the official bodies in charge (prepared by almost all countries to avoid the chaos of specifications and compatibility at a global level, and so at the moment) obviously, it is possible and I believe that Broadcom chips have an edge, each manufacturer can add to the specifications, further possibilities for improving the product, I myself have had the opportunity to test their good grip on particularly difficult lines, this does not mean that all chips have algorithms, or narrow implementations like Broadcom, but Standard implementations must be there if you want to sell Chips to equipment manufacturers, otherwise they might not even buy your Chips due to lack of specifications. So why do you say it's all fake?

     

    I have Keenetic Omni dsl and just bought Hopper Dsl.

    These two Keenetic connect VDSL2 at 88Mbit (8 SNR)  on a healthy line. While they have the same xdsl chipset, Hopper tends to sync a bit lower compared to Omni.

    In comparison to those, I have also two Zyxel modem routers with Broadcom chipset they always sync the same line at 99Mbit (8 SNR) which is the limit for profile17a.

    There is sadly a factor of VDSL2 CPE chipset to be "more" compatible with the whatever the FTTC cabinet is running. That's is the case in my country.

    I'm adding the screenshot from Hopper DSL. I'm going to add one from Zyxel later on.

    https://ibb.co/0MppXGZ

    And the Zyxel below. 100MBit sync.

    https://ibb.co/QYbNrf0

     

    I do expect Keenetic engineers to look into this and try to figure out how does Broadcom can sync exceptionally better than  Econet and try to improve it. Bcs this behavior is widespread in my country and valid for many VDSL2 users.

     

     

  2. On 8/29/2022 at 7:49 PM, PasKy said:

    ... there are no "A" and "B" series chipsets, all must for obvious reasons comply with the International rules of compliance with the IEE, ITU and other bodies responsible for specifications, which are universally adopted

    Just dropping by to say that this is entirely false. In my country, due to ISP equipment, broadcom chipsets  always deliver the highest speeds and signal rates compared any other chipset, modern or not. If you are not using a broadcom chipset based customer device, you are basically hindering yourself here for xdsl services.

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