![]() While the gear looks OK and the website is quite well done, it is just another Chinese brand owned by yet another Chinese Government company. We won’t be covering this for a few reasons. I kept responding with the same statement. Why did I write it? I was sick of several PR companies around the world sending me information and requesting reviews. ![]() I wish – could use some extra income in COVID times. 2.4G BGN is a relic and super booster is a scam (eventually misleading presentation) Access points have 2/3/4 and more antennas for increasing efficiency as well frequency bands (2.4/5GHz) and standards. It has one antenna so it can not be so effective as presented. In practice it will be 50-80 Mbps when booster is close to router and you are close to booster. standard N (up to 300Mbps) however this is max speed in duplex mode what gives max effective speed up to 150Mbps in perfect, laboratory/controlled environment. All cheap devices are offering (as it was written) 2.4Ghz band and max. Only proper network (star’s constellation cabling ) and proper end – access points will give you full network’s potential. THERE IS NOT A SUPER DEVICE SUCH WIFI BOOSTER WHICH WILL WORK AS PRESENTED IN ADV’s. ![]() What’s funny – Company registered in Hong Kong, office is in Tallinn, Estonia, but there are given 2 phone numbers : Brasil and UK (of course VOIP or cloud pbx). I sent few emails with request about some technical details and wait for the answer. At this moment I work (try to expose) with one of this incredible companies who offer super fast internet access all the time. I am surprise nobody check them from the technical point of view (false adv.). There are many companies which offer fake solutions. The problem is that most use Wi-Fi repeaters to try and extend weak signals in the first place. This just means that you get the weak signal a little further away from your main router.Īnd Wi-Fi A/B/N is half-duplex meaning that at best you will get up to 75Mbps – not 300Mbps if SuperBoost receives a strong signal to start with. If the signal is weak to begin with, no amount of rocket science or voodoo magic can improve it. You can buy it (since 2017) for $16.57 from eBay and many merchants with free delivery.Ī repeater takes the signal it gets and retransmits that. It is not as claimed ‘blazingly fast’ (more a geriatric snail’s pace) and it’s certainly not worth the 50% off $66.58 ‘if you hurry’ plus $8.95 shipping. Yes we believe in Santa and the Easter Bunny too Its privacy agreement is a shambles and basically means that the company can use and sell your data as it pleases, including selling to social media. Now back to SuperBoost WiFi – it is nothing more than a cheap, highly ineffective, slow, single-band 300Mbps 2.4Ghz Wi-Fi repeater. From what we can find it is owned by Think Tech Enterprises Limited in Hong Kong and is used to promote Super Boost Wi-Fi and a host of other tech gadgets around the world using subdomains like /AU etc. is a similarly named site registered in 22/1/19.
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