Banana Pi BPI-R4 MediaTek MT7988A (Filogic 880) OpenWRT Wifi 7 Router complete instI-allation video
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- Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
- Banana Pi BPI-R4 MediaTek MT7988A (Filogic 880) OpenWRT Wifi 7 Router complete instI-allation video,include 5G and wifi 7 module.
Banana Pi BPI-R4 Router board with MediaTek MT7988A (Filogic 880) quad-core ARM Corex-A73 design ,4GB DDR4 RAM,8GB eMMC,128MB SPI-NAND flash onboard, also have 2x 10Gbe SFP, 4x Gbe network port,with USB3.2 port,M.2 support 4G/5G/NVME SSD.2x miniPCIe slots with PCIe3.0 2lane interface for Wi-Fi 7 NIC (Network Interface Card). It is a very high performance open source router development board.
docs.banana-pi.org/en/BPI-R4/...
#bananapi #raspberrypi #opensource #openwrt #router
6 Wi-Fi antennas only? Can we get Wi-Fi module with 14 antennas?
And in case of releasing wi-fi module with 14 antennas - how connect 5g antennas to the case? Please add some holes to the case.
Also please add some ventilation holes to the case - for fan.
Where can i buy this set with wifi and 5g module, and what 5G modem was used ?
We are also waiting for your wifi 7 module.
will ready soon.
where can i get the wifi module?, the bundles sold in aliexpress all come without it.
What bandwidth passes through WireGuard?
Where Can I buy Filelogic 360 and Filelogic 380 Wifi/Blutetoth combo cards for laptops?
Umm, case has heat sink with fan but where is the hole in the case for air to exit???
It make bzzzz
Hello! Will the module Wi-Fi 7 soon be on sale?
yes , all test will finish soon ,and will public , wifi7 test need time to do all test.
POE should not be optional. It must be built--in.
when you use one 2.5g and one 10G , will support PoE with 2.5G port
@@lionwangsinovoip Very cool. I think that is worth clarifying more loudly elsewhere; I don't remember seeing that information before, and while it was never an issue for me, I have seen others bring it up in the past.
Honestly, on the surface, I am quite pleased with the design. While PoE may be nice, personally, the SFP+ cage is far more useful and important. In my case, due to poor infrastructure, we're looking to deploy a neighborhood mesh network as a backup during emergencies, as well as, hopefully, later providing community-owned internet service.
For us, that means, sometimes, relatively long cable runs to the home from certain access points or PTP links, which fiber makes much easier. And, economically speaking, it's just far more viable to deploy several of these over fiber than anything else; 24-48 port 10GbE RJ45 switches are not cheap, and 10GBASE-T transceivers alone to convert from SFP+ to RJ45 can cost nearly half the price of the BPI-R4 board (at least, at consumer single-unit pricing).
Lastly, I think the choice of MediaTek was also the ideal decision, even if it has meant some delays and kernel work. Proprietary firmware sucks from an audibility perspective, as well as simply the fact that firmware often has issues, and when it behaves pathologically, if you cannot easily modify it, you're in trouble.
MediaTek is not perfect in that sense, last time I checked, they still ship proprietary blobs. However, the same holds for every other wireless vendor as well; you cannot get anything newer than 802.11n with truly open firmware. The difference is, that MediaTek ships far, far, far less of it; compare the MT blobs with anyone else, be it Broadcom or whoever, and they can be a tenth the size; surface area is much smaller.
I hope some of the feedback from other users and the challenges have not discouraged the team from similar designs in the future. Currently, these are nearly ideal, in my opinion. And it is one of the only options in an under-served market.