Originally posted by elvenbone
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Steam Rolling Out New Apps For Android/iOS
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Originally posted by elvenbone View PostAFAIK, at least on iOS devices, an app can't tell which WiFi or which kind of WiFi it is connected to, just that it is connected.
So what do they mean by 5 GHz? Do they require a minimum data rate of say 200 MBit/s which not all 2.4 Ghz devices can reach?
Or are there latency differences as well between 2.4 Ghz and 5 Ghz WiFi?
And no, there is no way to determine the difference between 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz by performance alone. 5Ghz can't provide any substantial amount of bandwith more than 2.4 unless you are sitting on top of the router itself and I don't think they want to cut out a large part of usebase by enforcing a minimum bandwith.Last edited by starshipeleven; 10 May 2018, 05:57 AM.
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Originally posted by PackRat View Post"In 2009 802.11n was added to 802.11. It operates in both the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands at a maximum data transfer rate of 600 Mbit/s. Most newer routers are able to utilise both wireless bands, known as dualband." - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_LAN
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Originally posted by Nille View Post
Ok, after some trys with android on the pi, its horrible. The performance is really bad and no hardware decoding.
I suspect that the android image you use on your Pi does not have these decoders enabled.
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Originally posted by elvenbone View PostThe Raspberry Pi has hardware decoders for MPEG-2 and VC-1. For the supported Linux distributions, the licenses for these decoders have to be bought from raspberrypi.com.
Originally posted by elvenbone View PostThen the Pi can handle Full HD movies even with high bit rates without problems.
Originally posted by elvenbone View PostI suspect that the android image you use on your Pi does not have these decoders enabled.
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