200 Mbps how much. Pitfalls of high-speed tariffs of Internet providers. Megabits, megabytes and real speeds

In the race for market leadership, Internet providers offering wired Internet, use different strategies. Many of them follow the usual path: they reduce tariffs, improve equipment, and provide support for local media resources with free content. But there are also providers who are trying to win their place in the sun with ambitious features such as delivery high speed internet– connections with speeds exceeding 100 Mbit/s. In some CIS countries (for example, in Kazakhstan), it is still rare to find Internet speeds offered by providers of more than 150 Mbit/s. But on the websites of Internet providers in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus, offers in the form of tariff plans with speeds of 200, 300, 500 and even 1000 Mbit/s are not uncommon. High-speed tariff plans are more expensive than regular ones, which usually promise unlimited traffic and speeds of up to 100 Mbit/s. Price high speed tariffs higher than regular tariffs, but prices are not directly proportional to the speed increase factor. For a tariff with a speed of 200 Mbit/s, providers ask for the cost of a speed of 100 Mbit/s with an average markup of 30-40%. And in promotional tariffs, which you urgently need to switch to before such and such a date, otherwise the chance will be missed, the markup may be even less. What is the secret of such generosity? Is everything explained by the strategy “big packs are cheaper”? Below we will look at the pitfalls of high-speed tariffs.

1. Why do you need Internet speeds greater than 100 Mbit/s?

High Internet speed – more than 100 Mbit/s – is not relevant in every case. A tariff plan with a speed of 100 Mbit/s will be enough for comfortable web surfing, online games, watching IP-TV or video on the Internet, including in HD quality. Problems may arise only if such a number of devices are connected via Wi-Fi that the router begins to greatly reduce the speed for each user of the home network. For an average router, this is usually more than 10 devices (including TVs, refrigerators and other Smart House equipment).

An Internet speed of more than 100 Mbit/s makes sense only when downloading heavy files to a computer - operating system distributions or other software, videos high quality, audio collections, etc. Only if you constantly download large files can pay for a high-speed Internet connection be justified. For example, if members of the whole family actively download files from torrent trackers and file storages at the same time in the evenings. But even then we are talking only about those tariff plans, the speed of which, for technical reasons, can be used on computer and mobile devices in the home. After all, in order to unlock the potential of a high-speed tariff plan, you need to have equipment in your home that would, in fact, ensure the release of this potential. And not all modern technology is designed to be able to use high Internet speeds.

2. Hard drive capabilities

The potential of a tariff with an Internet speed of more than 200 Mbit/s may not be realized if the computer does not have an SSD installed, but a regular HDD - a hard drive with magnetic platters. When you open sites in a browser window, their data is written to the cache, that is, downloaded to the computer’s disk. The browser cache consists of several small files, the reading and writing speed of which on HDDs, as a rule, does not even reach 1 Mb/s (8 Mb/s). HDDs can achieve speeds from 80 to 170 Mb/s (respectively, from 640 to 1360 Mb/s) only when recording files sequentially, that is, when downloading single large files from the Internet. But this is the maximum figure, which can only be achieved in certain areas (at the outer edge of the plate, where there are more tracks, which, accordingly, have more sectors). When writing large files, the average data writing speed may be even less than half the maximum possible HDD speed.

Not only HDD, but not even every SSD drive will be able to unlock the potential of a tariff with Internet speeds of more than 700 Mbit/s. If we even talk about the 1000 Mbit/s tariff, then even if you have a computer with a powerful SSD, it makes sense to pay for such a tariff, unless you have a router in the house and access the Internet from several devices.

3. Router bandwidth


“Correct” providers in the description of tariff plans on their websites honestly warn that the offered high speeds can only be obtained under direct connection conditions - when the provider’s cable is connected to the Ethernet port of a PC or laptop. The fact is that home routers not only cut speed by distributing it between devices connected to the network, they are also limited throughput at 300 Mbit/s. This is the maximum speed that a budget router can theoretically handle. To use a tariff plan with an Internet speed of 1000 Mbit/s, you need to purchase a special powerful router that supports the corresponding speed indicator. And such routers are an order of magnitude more expensive than simple models.

It is also necessary to understand that when operating under maximum load, the router’s resource will be exhausted faster.

4. Network card

Like a router, a network card can be a limiter on high Internet speeds. Older network cards, for example, can only support a maximum data transfer rate of 100 Mbps. In this case, you will have to upgrade your PC and replace the network card with a modern one with higher bandwidth.

5. Wi-Fi module

With a Wi-Fi module built into a laptop or as part of a PC, the picture is the same as with a network card. Budget laptop assemblies can be equipped with Wi-Fi modules with a throughput of up to 150 Mbit/s. And old network cards with Wi-Fi for PCs, connected via the PCI interface, are completely limited by the speed of the 802.11a standard - up to 54 Mbit/s. In this case, the Wi-Fi module will have to be replaced. Or, specifically for working with a high-speed tariff plan, purchase a Wi-Fi module connected to a USB port.

6. Weak processor

The processor, to a lesser extent than the above devices, can negatively affect the speed of Internet delivery. However, it is the “heart” of the computer, and will to some extent determine how quickly data can be written to or read from the hard drive. So, if we are talking about purchasing a high-speed tariff plan, the weak computer processor will need to be replaced with a more powerful one. And these are quite significant financial costs, especially if the processor has to be changed along with the motherboard. If the laptop does not support replacing the processor, you will need to sell it and buy a new one with more powerful hardware.

7. To summarize: is it worth switching to high-speed tariffs?


Internet with speeds above 200 Mbit/s cannot yet be considered as an urgent need of society. If not to provide acceptable speed to each user of small offices, hostels, cafes, gas stations, etc. public places, transition to expensive tariff plan may turn out to be a waste of money. Fast access to sites is also provided within the tariff with speeds of up to 100 Mbit/s. If we are dealing with a slow server, not a single high-speed tariff will help. It’s easier to contact the site owner with a request to upgrade the equipment. A high-speed tariff will not always be able to ensure the speed of downloading files from the Internet. For example, high Internet speed on the current computer will in no way solve the issue of downloading time for a file via torrent in conditions of low Internet speed of the seed seed (or intentional limitation of it in the torrent client settings).

Internet providers often use high-speed tariffs as a marketing ploy to attract customers. More precisely, to recapture them from competitors. It’s very good if the provider’s website, when describing the tariffs, stipulates specific technical requirements to devices that will participate in the process of ensuring high Internet speed (in fact, what was mentioned above).

It is important to take into account that in tariff plans providers specify the wording “up to such and such a speed”, for example, “up to 300 Mbit/s”. The speeds indicated by providers in tariff plans are, as a rule, the maximum rates achieved with certain conditions. For example, not during peak hours, when the provider’s channel is not overloaded. If you decide to switch to a high-speed tariff plan, you need to check with your provider about the actual Internet speed, in particular how much it usually decreases during peak hours.

Few doubt that sooner or later (and rather sooner) both providers and their subscribers will move to the next level of speed and gigabit networks. However, despite the successes, things are not moving too quickly yet.

There are basically two reasons for this. The first is that subscribers do not need such high speeds. You can download even 100 Mbit/s only with movies from torrents, and even then only in FullHD. Of course, in a large family with active users, a wide channel may still be useful in some way, but there are not too many such subscribers. The second reason is the noticeably different subscription fee compared to tariffs on networks with a maximum speed of 100 Mbit/s. Usually the fee is higher than the psychologically acceptable 1000 rubles per month, and noticeably higher than the current payment. The reason for this state of affairs is trivial - active equipment of a completely different class with a corresponding price tag, the payback of which, at low tariffs, stretches beyond the planning horizon.

However, there are exceptions to any rule. For our country, this exception was the xPON networks of the two largest telephone operators: MGTS and Rostelecom. Unlike the bulk of providers, whose networks were built using FTTB FastEthernet technology, xPON initially implied the ability to transfer more than one hundred megabits per second to the subscriber, albeit with its own characteristics. So competitive advantage It was stupid not to take advantage, and MGTS launched tariffs with speeds of 200, 350 and 500 Mbit/s a couple of years ago. True, they put a corresponding price tag on them, which immediately made high-speed tariffs uninteresting for the general public. After looking at the dismal results of such activities, the operator decided that it was time to change something. The result of this was a new offer: 200 Mbit/s for 490 rubles per month. This is almost 2.5 times cheaper than the “regular” MGTS tariff. Not only that, it’s cheaper than the vast majority of competitors’ 100 Mbps offerings, not to mention anything more. At such a cost, you can safely forget about the redundancy of such speed - if they give it, why not take it? Perhaps it will come in handy someday. And even if you don’t need it, it’s still cheap.

The only negative circumstance at this celebration of life is the promotional nature of the tariff: it will be available for connection only until the end of May for new subscribers. This is smoothed out by the fact that, unlike other similar offers, the tariff parameters will not change after the promotional period. So the lucky ones will continue to pay 490 rubles per month for a speed of 200 Mbit/s.

One question remains: why is MGTS? The answer is, in general, simple. There are practically no new subscribers in the capital, and there is simply nowhere to get them in large quantities. In such a situation, the only way to increase the client base is to steal it from others, but the problem is that in order to save 100 rubles, only a small part will rush to change providers. There remains dumping both in price and speed. An important circumstance is that investments in the network have already been made, and immediately in a high-speed network, which gave a significant advantage over competitors, for whom, in the current conditions, the cost of development has doubled.

Russia has very good and, no less important, affordable home Internet. Seriously! In villages and very deep provinces, things are, of course, worse, but take any city, even a small one, in the European part of the country and look at the tariffs. For 300–400 rubles a month you can bring Internet to your apartment at a speed of around 25–50 megabits per second, and with some promotion even 100 megabits.

For comparison: in “civilized” countries, fast Internet (both home and mobile) is much more expensive. And the concept of “monthly data limit” still lives there. We only have this left with mobile operators.

However, being cheap is not a reason to pay for something you don’t use. Even a hundred rubles saved warms your wallet, and therefore the tariff for your home Internet must be chosen based on your real speed needs. Let's figure out how many megabits per second are required in different situations, and start with the basic concepts.

Megabits, megabytes and real speeds

Data size is usually measured in bytes. For example, an HD movie weighs from 700 megabytes (megabytes) to 1.4 gigabytes (gigabytes), while a Full HD movie weighs from 4 to 14 gigabytes.

Data transfer rates are usually specified in bits (not bytes!) per second, and sometimes this causes misunderstanding.

Byte ≠ bit.

1 byte = 8 bits.

1 megabyte = 8 megabits.

1 megabyte per second = 8 megabits per second.

If the user does not distinguish between bytes and bits, he can easily confuse them or mistake them for the same thing. In this case, it will calculate the approximate time for downloading an HD movie via torrent something like this:

  1. The film weighs 1,400 "megs".
  2. Internet speed is 30 “megas” per second.
  3. The movie will download in 1,400 / 30 = 46.6 seconds.

In fact, the Internet speed is 30 megabits per second = 3.75 megabytes per second. Accordingly, 1,400 megabytes must be divided not by 30, but by 3.75. In this case, the download time will be 1,400 / 3.75 = 373 seconds.

In practice, the speed will be even lower, because Internet providers indicate the speed “up to”, that is, the maximum possible, and not the working speed. In addition, interference, especially over Wi-Fi transmissions, network congestion, and limitations and characteristics of user equipment and service provider equipment also contribute. You can check your speed using, and increase it using.

Often the bottleneck becomes the resource from which you download something. For example, your Internet speed is 100 megabits per second, and the site sends data at a speed of 10 megabits per second. In this case, the download will occur at a speed of no more than 10 megabits per second, and nothing can be done about it.

What internet speed do you really need?

Obviously, the above table requires clarification.

Questions and answers

What to do if the Internet is used on two or more devices at once?

Let's say you're watching Full HD streaming video on smart TV, the wife is surfing YouTube behind a laptop with an HD screen, and the child is watching something from a smartphone or tablet, also in HD quality. Does this mean that the numbers from the table need to be summed up?

Yes, that's absolutely right. In this case, you will need about 20 megabits per second.

Why do different sites have different speed requirements for watching videos of the same resolution?

There is such a thing as bitrate - the amount of information with which an image is encoded per unit of time, and, accordingly, a conditional indicator of the quality of picture and sound. The higher the bitrate, the better the image, as a rule. This is why on torrents you can find versions of the same movie with the same resolution, but different sizes.

Additionally, there are super-smooth 60fps videos. They weigh more and require faster internet.

Is it true that online games are so undemanding of Internet speed?

Yes, for most games like CS, Dota 2, WoT, WoW and even GTA 5, just one megabit per second is more than enough for multiplayer, but in this case, ping becomes decisive - the time it takes for the signal to travel from you to the game server and back. The lower the ping, the lower the latency in the game.

Unfortunately, it is impossible to know in advance even the approximate ping in a specific game through a specific provider, since its value is not constant and depends on many factors.

Why during video calls does the picture and sound from my interlocutors go normally to me, but not from me to them?

In this case, not only incoming, but also outgoing Internet speed becomes important. Often, providers do not indicate the outgoing speed in the tariff at all, but you can check it yourself using the same Speedtest.net.

To broadcast via a webcam, an outgoing speed of 1 megabit per second is sufficient. In the case of HD cameras (and especially Full HD), the requirements for outgoing speed increase.

Why do Internet service providers start at 20–30 or more megabits per second in speed tariffs?

Because the higher the speed, the more money they can charge you. Providers could keep the tariffs “from the past” with a speed of 2–10 megabits per second and reduce their cost to 50–100 rubles, but why? It is much more profitable to increase the minimum speeds and prices.

Connection options: For MGTS telephony subscribers.

Monthly subscription fee: 490 RUR/month.

  1. Wi-Fi modem for use – 0 rub./month.
  2. Unlimited Home Internet with speeds up to 200 Mbit/s
  3. Home Wi-Fi: Internet access anywhere in the apartment
  4. Payment system "Pay later". Use the service even with a negative balance!

Additional features:

Home TV

Home TV is more than just television, it is a complex of multimedia digital services on your TV screen!
Today, along with other services and capabilities, MTS TV has changed the approach to Home TV. Now, thanks to the “Personal TV” system, you can choose the channels you want to watch.

You will be surprised how great the possibilities of modern television are. And be sure to appreciate them!

Viewers of Home TV from MTS have access to:

personal channel selection system;
more than 200 of the best Russian and foreign channels in digital quality;
excellent picture and sound;
optimal tariffs;
control of TV services by pressing the remote control button in the TV interface menu.
“Personal TV” is a revolutionary channel subscription system. Now you don't need to order a themed TV package to watch one or two of your favorite channels. You can independently choose a list of TV channels that interest you and order them individually!

Thanks to the unique Personal TV system, you will watch only what you want to watch. The cost of one channel is from 1 rub. per month.

Find out more about Personal TV

Take advantage additional services and TV services!

REPEAT-TV service - viewing missed programs broadcast over the last 7 days.
The “TV pause” service is the ability to pause the broadcast of a TV channel at any time and return to watching within an hour, starting from the moment the broadcast was suspended.
Ability to set a reminder and select the broadcast language.
Additional information services on the TV screen - “MTS.Currency Rates”, “MTS.Weather”, “MTS.Route” from Yandex.Traffic (available by pressing the remote control button in the TV interface menu).
“Video on Demand” service - ordering popular films, including new releases, at any time. Set up a cinema right at home.
Turn on your emotions with Home TV! The world of cinema and travel, sports and science, fashion and music, news and politics, everything for children and thematic channels - all this and much more on your TV screens at any time.

To activate the Home TV service, you need:

Wi-Fi router with support digital television(Internet Protocol Television, IPTV). Available for use;
TV decoder. Available for rent (99 rubles/month including VAT);

The cat and I a little “dispersed” the twisted pair cable that came into the apartment

It is usually believed that the “ceiling” of DSL is 20-30 Mbit/s, (FTTB) twisted pair cable to an apartment is 100 Mbit/s, and PON supports speeds above 100 megabits. My colleagues and I decided to dispel the myths and “overclock” FTTB technology for a single provider.

The first thing we did was climb into the attic of the house. Already, at least 1 Gbit/s is coming to every home, and the home node has a suitable gigabit “copper” port. That is, we can simply take and switch any apartment where our cable is located to a suitable port and provide faster speeds 400 Mbps.

Actually, we have already done this as part of beta tests, and recently we launched commercial services in Moscow with new speeds. Yes, you can most likely connect.

What was that, cap?

Our backbone and city networks have a reserve of free capacity that significantly exceeds the needs of customers even during hours of the highest, maximum possible load. Take, for example, the holiday dearly beloved by me and my cat. New Year, in which those grandmothers who have already made friends with the Internet and Skype receive more congratulations.

What is the difference with PON

The fact is that our FTTB network, which allows us to do all this, already exists. No modifications required. The cable already enters your apartment. All the wires are there. The optics reach nodes in homes. You just need to take and switch the cable to another port on the switch. All! Such a channel is already approaching you, but you didn’t know about it. And PON needs to be built - this is new infrastructure throughout the city. There is another ambush - optical cores diverge from regional PBXs, which require proprietary client devices. But with a regular FTTB network, you can use anything. Although there are few devices adapted for L2TP.

How it works

A large transport canal comes from the main ring to the city level. Further around the city there are several large rings. From them there are smaller rings or mesh structures, “stars” are made at the entrance level. There are optical transport links from the first level to the closet in the entrance. On the access level switch, we reconnect the cable to a gigabit port... and that’s it, we now have a gigabit link to the client.

These are the results of my colleague without a cat, but with Wi-Fi (801.11 ac).

Technical feasibility

After I was able to test this at several points, we installed such links for all company employees working on the project. Quite quickly, I must say. There are almost no technical limitations: the only thing is that there are literally a couple of dozen blocks in Moscow where the equipment needs to be slightly modernized, but we are already working on this.

More restrictions

You will laugh, but we have not found ways to utilize such speeds. So, it turned out that such a channel can only be filled with very specific tasks - this is either CCTV from a bunch of cameras, or HD video for all family members at the same time, or the tasks of a photographer uploading pictures somewhere. Also – network drives. In general, with the exception of torrents, it’s a provider’s dream: the client once a day makes a “bang” with a heavy file and is wildly happy.

But a number of other things have arisen that directly relate to marketing. First, almost all resources deliver content much slower than the channel can receive. This is the eternal problem “why is my Internet slow, but tests show normal speed.” Because we need resources that can provide a large number delivering content to clients at high speed. So someone will have to give up illusions; not every resource meets these requirements.
100Mbit/s is already a very fast Internet connection for the vast majority of users. Even higher speeds may be required for those who have to work with very large files.

Everything in this photo is correct, including the router

The link to the desktop or laptop must be copper - Wi-Fi, especially in the presence of interference from other networks, simply will not allow the channel to be distributed at such a speed. That's why best option– desktop on cable, tablets and phones – by air.

The end devices themselves can also cut traffic. Naturally, you must have a device that supports 400 Mbps (router or network card). In beta, however, a couple of surprises were revealed with the fact that not all devices can actually handle such traffic, despite statements about this.

Tests

This is where the fun begins. We took 10 high-performance devices with L2TP support.

Gigabit is fast, especially for home use, so routers must be appropriate. I’ll say right away that it was not possible to cover all models and quickly test them, so we focused on supporting a gigabit connection, dual-band Wi-Fi and good reviews from users.

Our shortlist:
Asus RT-68U
D-Link DIR 825 D1
Pre-sale sample from new manufacturer Totolink
Zyxel Keenetic Ultra
Apple Air port Time capsule

Once I tested the devices according to our checklists in the office, it was time to test the devices in the field, here you can evaluate the real performance of the device.

For this action, I tried to prepare thoroughly, took a MacBook Pro 15 retina (late 2012) - my main work laptop, plugged a 128GB SSD into a separate desktop and connected the Asus PCE-AC68 Wi-Fi adapter there so that nothing would interfere with overclocking, also I took the Totolink A2000UA USB Wi-Fi adapter with 802.11ac support just in case. In addition, I brought an iPad mini, iPhone 5 and Samsung Galaxy note - we will test Wi-Fi on them.

To check the speed, in addition to the usual resources, such as speedtest, file downloading, I installed Iperf on one of our servers connected via a gigabyte link to our core network. It seems like everything turned out something like this:

A little about the test methodology

In many router reviews that I have seen, stands with programs for generating traffic are usually assembled. We decided to do it differently: to conduct testing the same way a subscriber would do when checking the speed of our Internet access.
The main tools were:
1) Speedtest.net – you can’t live without it
2) Mirror.yandex.ru
3) Iperf – a little synthetics
4) Youtube

The list is small, but on these resources you can evaluate how fast Internet access works, so to speak natural product and no synthetics.

Let's start testing

First, let's see which Wi-Fi networks are already nearby

“People’s” 2.4GHz band – no more and no less

5GHz - we even got here, but there are not many networks, two of them are ours

Asus RT-68U

Top router from Asus. The hardware of the device inspires respect: a chip from Broadcom BCM4708A, 256MB RAM, 128MB Flash, support for 802.11ac and Beamforming is present.

Patch cord: speed test showed 224Mbps for download and 196Mbps for Upload

Good result, we continue testing, Iperf is next.

The unexpected happened during this test. Either the router started to glitch, or iperf, but the results did not rise above 50Mbps. No problem, let's look at more life test– downloading a file from Yandex.

Almost 35MB per second!

I ran the tests a few more times, then decided to clean the SSD; at such speeds it quickly clogged.

Now let's take a look at how fast Wi-Fi works. Wireless networking is a tricky thing, and many factors can affect the final performance. The laptop was located 4 meters from the router in a straight line.

The speed test showed almost 165Mbps on Download and 166 on Upload. Worthy! Especially when it comes to the 2.4GHz band

Iperf showed similar values:

Let's switch now to 5GHz. Since the router can work with 802.11ac, but my work Macbook does not, I connected an external adapter that supports 802.11ac 2x2.

The connection was successful... Let's take a look at the speed test:

209Mbps on Download 111 on Upload, most likely 210Mbps is the current ceiling for router performance over L2TP. Let's hope that Asus will fix this in new firmware.

Iperf showed even lower results:

D-Link Dir 825 D1

Next in line is the representative of the mid-price range D-Link DIR825. The router is equipped with a Dual-Band Wi-Fi module, which is currently rare for the mid-price range. Let's see what this router is capable of.

Connection via patch cord

Let's move on to testing Wi-Fi networks. The router has two Airgain antennas, so I expect high speeds over Wi-Fi as well.

For a network operating in the 2.4GHz range:

This frequency is maximally loaded, so this result was, in principle, expected. How will 5GHz manifest itself?

130-150Mbps. When tinkering with the settings in detail, it turned out that if you disable Wi-Fi network encryption, performance increases. Of course, I didn’t discover America, but I didn’t find such a pattern on other routers.

Let's move on to the next test subject - Totolink

This router has similar characteristics to the D-Link DIR 825, they are built on the same SoC - RTL8197D, but in this router the radio module supports 802.11ac. It will be interesting to evaluate its capabilities in real conditions.

Patch cord:

Eh... okay, I'll leave it without comment.

We are getting closer to reality.

To be honest, I didn’t think that the “old man” RTL8197D was capable of pumping L2TP through itself at such speeds. This makes the results of Wi-Fi network testing more interesting.

“People’s” frequency – 2.4GHz

Both speedtest and iperf showed almost identical results.
At 5GHz the speed should be prohibitive! Maybe…

But no, although the connection showed that the connection was established at a speed of 867Mbps.

Iperf is trying to bring him down to the ground, and he is doing well.

Our latest marathon participant is Zyxel Keenetic Ultra

A popular model among L2TP devices. It accelerates well and works stably. We connect the patch cord and run the speed test:

And I’ll download the Fedora distribution, which has already become native for the duration of the tests:

Unfortunately, this model from Zyxel does not support 802.11ac, so I will be content with 802.11n. Let's get started!

Let's look at 5GHz

Neither more nor less – standard. This situation did not suit me, and I decided to connect a new Time Capsule with support for 802.11ac (very conventional for the PCT model) to the router.

Here! It’s a pity that manufacturers don’t include a time capsule with their routers.

What if you measure the speed on a phone/tablet?

Most users, especially those who are not familiar with the methodologies various tests productivity, and simply launch the application on your phone. I'll do that too.

There was an iPhone, tablet and Android phone available. There is no point in testing the connection on each router, so I settled on the latest router model.

For 2.4GHz and 5GHz, respectively, here we have hit the performance ceiling of the Wi-Fi module on the phone. Devices on Android showed approximately the same results, while on a tablet this speed was obtained when connected to a network at 5GHz; at 2.4GHz it will most likely be lower:

Well, tests on the street:

What happened?

The process of testing the new service greatly fascinated my cat and me, so in the end we tested 10 routers from different manufacturers, price categories with different “stuffing”. Here are the most interesting:

  • Zyxel Keenetic Ultra
  • D-Link DIR825
  • Toto-Link
  • Asus RT-68U
  • Zyxel Keenetic Giga II
  • TP-Link Archer C7 v.1
  • D-Link DIR 850L
  • Buffalo WZR-1759DHP
  • Netgear R7000 "Highthawk"
  • Arcadian

So if you have an SSD or RAID from an HDD at home, there is a good Wi-Fi router, and if you solve specific problems that require fast internet, then the new service will be useful to you.

Price

The service is new, a description will appear on the website in a couple of days. The cost is 1850 rubles per month, if without our router.