Thursday, October 1st 2015

Netgear Introduces the Nighthawk X8 AC5300 Wi-Fi Router

Netgear, a global networking company that delivers innovative products to consumers, businesses and service providers, today introduced a WiFi router for your home that sets a new standard for speed, features and performance. The latest addition to the company's premium Nighthawk product line of WiFi routers, Nighthawk X8 AC5300 Smart WiFi Router (R8500) delivers astonishing Internet performance with combined WiFi speeds up to a blistering 5.3 Gbps (1000 Mbps + 2166 Mbps + 2166 Mbps), a new record for a home router. This quad-stream, tri-band router provides more Internet bandwidth for all the devices in your home, so everyone in the family can stream movies and music, download files, surf the web, share photos, and enjoy online gaming - simultaneously and without lag.

Engineered from the ground up with a stylish modern design, the Nighthawk X8 is performance perfected with the new Wave 2 AC WiFi. It is powered by an extremely powerful 1.4GHz dual core processor for faster connections; the industry's first, patent-pending Active Antennas to boost range; and three WiFi bands with quad-streams, 1024 QAM, and MU-MIMO capable for the fastest WiFi speeds. It also supports more wired connections with six Gigabit Ethernet ports including two that can be aggregated for faster file transfers. All told, the Nighthawk X8 pushes wireless performance and range to an extreme that is required for enabling your increasingly always-on networked life.
Due to the recent explosion in popularity of mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets, the average household today has more than 12 WiFi devices connecting to its network, according to a new survey conducted by market research firm MarketLab. The proliferation of these devices is expected to grow exponentially in the next few years as the "Internet of Things" (IoT) smart home becomes a reality. The next-generation Nighthawk X8 WiFi router from NETGEAR ensures the bandwidth required to support this ever-growing number of networked devices. The Nighthawk X8 delivers the best WiFi speed across all your devices, even when your family members are streaming, gaming, and downloading files at the same time.

"Nighthawk X8 is the next wave in WiFi and is for people who crave the absolute best networking experience possible today. Tri-band WiFi helps provide sufficient bandwidth for the increasing number of devices in the home and cutting-edge Wave 2 AC provides the best WiFi performance," said Sandeep Harpalani, NETGEAR senior director of product marketing for Retail Network Products.

He added, "Nighthawk X8 has enhancements such as industry-first Active Antennas for the best range and performance, additional Gigabit ports for more wired connections, and even port aggregation for streaming capability from your networked storage device at greater than Gigabit speeds. Simply put, Nighthawk X8 delivers performance that outpaces any other router in the market today."

Today's homes combine many new and old WiFi devices that slow down overall performance. The SmartConnect feature of the tri-band Nighthawk X8 is engineered to intelligently segment slower and faster devices into the most appropriate WiFi band so that not only can the fast devices run faster, but even older devices will offer better performance.

You can also use the tri-band capability to segment traffic by devices or application. In a typical older dual-band router, for example, the video streamer and the Internet gamer have to effectively "time-share" bandwidth. However, with a tri-band router such as Nighthawk X8, video streaming and Internet gaming traffic can each operate on separate bands, effectively getting double the speed of a dual-band router.

Moreover, Nighthawk X8 offers a unique Dynamic QoS prioritization capability. Instead of treating all devices and applications as the same, Dynamic QoS recognizes each individual application and the device it is running on, and prioritizes their network traffic accordingly. Whether you are using your smartphone, tablet or laptop computer for gaming, streaming, transferring files or web browsing, Nighthawk X8 ensures that you are getting the most effective network connection for the best possible experience.

Nighthawk X8 boasts a total of eight antennas, four internal and four patent-pending external Active Antennas - the industry's first - that boost the wireless range of the Nighthawk X8. Unlike typical antennas that simply relay the WiFi signal received from your devices to the router, Active Antennas amplify the WiFi signal within the external antenna itself. They eliminate loss in signal strength and avoid any additional noise during transmission. Active Antennas effectively compensate for the low power of WiFi devices to provide a more symmetrical connection for both receiving and sending wireless signals, which contributes to improving overall range and speed at long range.

You'll also be able to transfer large data files, photos, and videos in minutes rather than hours thanks to the port aggregation capability of Nighthawk X8 (also known as "port trunking"). The router has six Gigabit Ethernet LAN ports, the largest number available on a mainstream home router. Two of these ports can be aggregated to double the gigabit connection to a Network Attached Storage (NAS) device - such as all current NETGEAR ReadyNAS models with two Ethernet ports - to support 4K HD streaming, faster backups, and faster file transfers.

Technical Benefits of Nighthawk X8
NETGEAR has designed Nighthawk X8 with best-in-class technology for speed, range, sharing, reliability, ease of use and security. It offers an unmatched WiFi experience for your WiFi-enabled devices - smartphones, notebooks, tablets, smart TVs, gaming consoles, Blu-ray players, and media servers.
  • Tri-band, quad-stream WiFi intelligently connects more devices to the fastest WiFi band possible and increases overall network speed, for a combined speed up to an astounding 5.3Gbps (1000 Mbps + 2166 Mbps + 2166 Mbps) with 1024 QAM support.
  • The powerful 1.4GHz dual core processor delivers faster speed for improved WiFi, wired and USB performance.
  • Smart Connect intelligently selects the fastest WiFi band for every device.
  • Six Gigabit Ethernet LAN ports connect more wired devices and include dual port aggregation capability that doubles the gigabit connection to your NAS for 4K HD streaming and faster file transfers and backups.
  • Eight antennas include four patent-pending external Active Antennas that enhance weak signals and reduce interference.
  • Application-aware and device-aware Dynamic QoS technology optimizes your connection speed for reduced lag and buffering.
  • MU-MIMO-capable technology designed for simultaneous streaming to multiple devices will provide major performance improvements with next-generation mobile devices.
  • Beamforming+ improves WiFi coverage and reliability by focusing WiFi directly at connected devices.
  • NETGEAR genie app is a personal dashboard that includes remote access to make it easy to install, monitor, control and repair your home network when you're away from home.
  • ReadyCLOUD USB access enables you to enjoy personal and secure cloud access to USB storage anytime, anywhere.
  • ReadySHARE Vault, a free software application, automatically backs up Windows-based PCs on your network to a USB hard drive connected to Nighthawk X8.
  • Enhanced Parental Controls enable web filtering and accessibility by family member or devices.
  • Security features include VPN support for secure remote access to your home network and Internet when away from home and separate guest network access.
  • NETGEAR MyMedia enables you to find and play your stored media from anywhere on your network to your DLNA-ready TVs and music system.
  • Two USB ports for easy access and transfer of your content, including one SuperSpeed USB 3.0 port that offers high-speed, storage-ready access significantly faster than USB 2.0.
Pricing and Availability
The NETGEAR Nighthawk X8 AC5300 Smart WiFi Router is available now in the U.S. from major retailers in stores and online, at an MSRP of $399.99.

For more information, visit the product page.
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26 Comments on Netgear Introduces the Nighthawk X8 AC5300 Wi-Fi Router

#1
ensabrenoir
.....+10 points for it not looking like a large dead insect on your furnishing.........

Posted on Reply
#2
thesmokingman
^^Hehe, but I kinda like the Asus. Will make it easier to mount upside down in my attic. That MSRP is a killer though.
Posted on Reply
#3
Chaitanya
ensabrenoir.....+10 points for it not looking like a large dead insect on your furnishing.........

+1
Posted on Reply
#4
Kursah
-100 points for a consumer WiFi router that costs $400. Though it does have some impressive features for a consumer-grade router not impressive enough to justify that price. I'll stick with my Ubiquity gear thank you.
Posted on Reply
#5
TheLostSwede
News Editor
1024 QAM, right, so not a single device will support it...
Right now, this is the most pointless router you could buy.
Posted on Reply
#7
RejZoR
I still think ASUS RT-AC87U looks the best of all high end routers. It's plain and modern, but not overdone or too plain. It's just perfect. And the fact you can disable ALL LED lights on it makes it perfect stealth device. It's just there and does the job.
Posted on Reply
#8
Igb
RejZoRI still think ASUS RT-AC87U looks the best of all high end routers. It's plain and modern, but not overdone or too plain. It's just perfect. And the fact you can disable ALL LED lights on it makes it perfect stealth device. It's just there and does the job.
The problem is that, despite being one of the best in the aesthetics department, it dissapoints in performance. Don't get me wrong, is not a bad router, but being a 4x4 design one expects it to outperform their 3x3 Broadcom sibling (RT-AC68U) in every metric posible.

But it fails in that, AC68 performs roughly the same if not a bit better in most scenarios. Hell, i don't even know if Quantenna FINALLY supports MU-MIMO or the only solution that works is the one from QCA.
Posted on Reply
#9
remixedcat
The QCA one requires all new hardware for the clients while BCM's doesn't (AFAIK). So far there are only 6-8 clients that support QCA's MU-EFX and they aren't out yet for general consumption.

I think they are holding the FW upgrades till wifi-alliance passes it. They can't ship gear with that logo till they pass it. That logo tells people it's trustworthy and stable...
Posted on Reply
#10
Ferrum Master
remixedcatThe QCA one requires all new hardware for the clients while BCM's doesn't (AFAIK). So far there are only 6-8 clients that support QCA's MU-EFX and they aren't out yet for general consumption.

I think they are holding the FW upgrades till wifi-alliance passes it. They can't ship gear with that logo till they pass it. That logo tells people it's trustworthy and stable...
My most important issue with those things, do they really will work with spectrum filled area full of active devices? Not a remote playboy rancho manor?
Posted on Reply
#11
remixedcat
Ferrum MasterMy most important issue with those things, do they really will work with spectrum filled area full of active devices? Not a remote playboy rancho manor?
I'd have to get some as review units to find out ;) There's in between 20-45 detectable APs/Routers around my place. Too many other testers use clean rooms with shielding and fake conditions so they aren't as good of a base on real world performance
Posted on Reply
#12
Cybrnook2002
Ferrum MasterMy most important issue with those things, do they really will work with spectrum filled area full of active devices? Not a remote playboy rancho manor?
remixedcatI'd have to get some as review units to find out ;) There's in between 20-45 detectable APs/Routers around my place. Too many other testers use clean rooms with shielding and fake conditions so they aren't as good of a base on real world performance
Nothing is going to solve cross chatter/interference of a congested channel. No matter how good the wifi unit you are using is, you still get interference on both the broadcasting end and the receiving end. So until we get more spectrum from the FCC and our available channels list gets longer, it's all the same. (Unless I misinterpreted what you meant there Ferrum Master, it read strange to me anyways)

Ah, maybe I read it wrong and you were just commenting that a certification process certifying an already congested spectrum is about as useful as handlebars on a surfboard.

TBH, for the majority of users, AC 877 is still where it's at for the majority of your in home clients.
Posted on Reply
#13
Arjai
WiFi speeds up to a blistering 5.3 Gbps (1000 Mbps + 2166 Mbps + 2166 Mbps), a new record for a home router.
Um, who is gonna saturate that? Someone in Atlanta? Where else has this bandwidth?
Posted on Reply
#17
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Apparently it has a couple of humps...

I hope Netgear have figured out that the aggregation ports need to support multiple standards, since not all NAS appliances support the same options.

Posted on Reply
#18
ensabrenoir
evilacgHow bout this?

www.asus.com/Networking/RT-AC5300/
.......wow....definitely one of those facehugger aliens from the Aliens movie. Imagine sitting there netflixing then suddenly



would love to see some as close as possible real world comparisons of the top tier routers.....
Posted on Reply
#19
remixedcat
ArjaiUm, who is gonna saturate that? Someone in Atlanta? Where else has this bandwidth?
HOTlanta :D
Posted on Reply
#20
pat-roner
TheLostSwedeApparently it has a couple of humps...

I hope Netgear have figured out that the aggregation ports need to support multiple standards, since not all NAS appliances support the same options.

Ugh! Is it wavy? Dealbreaker...
Posted on Reply
#21
pat-roner
Kursah-100 points for a consumer WiFi router that costs $400. Though it does have some impressive features for a consumer-grade router not impressive enough to justify that price. I'll stick with my Ubiquity gear thank you.
I hear you, Brother!
Posted on Reply
#22
Toots
So 90% of the reviews of this product on amazon.com are from people who admit to being netgear employees/friends and family, who got it for free. They all gave it 5 stars. LOL!
Posted on Reply
#24
Ferrum Master
Well that's really sad. Aren't only those who made the transaction for the product allowed to write a review?
Posted on Reply
#25
Cybrnook2002
Nope. Because the vendor uses the retailer to distribute the item. So it's as if they bought it for $0.00. Thus allowing them to give an unbiased review. Who, who got it for free, would rate it anything less than 5 stars.
Posted on Reply
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