I don’t have problems connecting my SD OLED to a 5 GHz SSID, but mine refuses to connect to a SSID with WPA3 or WPA3 Transition Mode. I had to create a WPA2 only network.
I don’t have problems connecting my SD OLED to a 5 GHz SSID, but mine refuses to connect to a SSID with WPA3 or WPA3 Transition Mode. I had to create a WPA2 only network.
The adapter found in the link contains a MediaTek MT7921K which should work just fine for those speeds.
My OLED will not connect to WPA3. Even in Transition Mode. I had to create a new network using the older WPA2 security mode…
There is another thread on how to disable the built in Wi-Fi and put the UBC 1322 into bridge mode. Unfortunately it seems like you have to call your ISP and get them to do it for you. https://www.reddit.com/r/OPTIMUM/comments/ngmh7f/can_the_ubee_ubc1322_disable_wifi/
I would start there that way you can pass WAN connectivity straight to your Eero.
Literally my SD oled wouldn’t connect during out of the box setup because it was trying to associate in 6 GHz where WPA3 is required. Packet capture showed the SD deauthing itself after receiving the Association Response from the AP in 6 GHz.
When I go and try and setup the network manually it only lists None and WPA2 as security options. It won’t connect when WPA3-Personal is in Transition Mode either. Is your experience different? This seems like Valve completely overlooked the WPA3 requirement for 6 GHz operation.
Now if you break out of Steam and look underneath, it is running wpa_supplicant version 2.10 so it should have zero problems connecting to WPA3 in 6 GHz. It just seems the network manager on Steam does not support WPA3 period right now.
You probably don’t need it, but it sounds like you want it.
It is comfortable at first but I do get some wrist pain after a period of time.