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UniFi Airwire – REAL WiFi 7 MLO?

Par : Rob Andrews
20 mars 2026 à 15:48

UniFi and the Airwire – Did Ubiquiti just SOLVE Everyone’s WiFi MLO Issue?

Ubiquiti has introduced the UniFi AirWire, a WiFi 7 client adapter designed to address one of the more limited areas of current WiFi 7 deployment: the client side. While WiFi 7 access points and routers have been marketed heavily around Multilink Operation, many currently available client devices still rely on single-radio implementations that switch between bands rather than maintaining simultaneous links. The AirWire is positioned as a dedicated external client that aims to deliver true STR MLO operation across 5 GHz and 6 GHz, with Ubiquiti claiming improved throughput, lower latency, and better resilience than conventional integrated client hardware.

At a hardware level, the AirWire is a USB-C connected WiFi 7 adapter with a 4-stream design, support for 5 GHz and 6 GHz 2 x 2 MU-MIMO operation, and a quoted uplink capability of up to 5.8 Gbps on 6 GHz and 4.3 Gbps on 5 GHz. It also adds a high-gain antenna design and a dedicated scanning radio for real-time spectrum analysis. At $199, this places it well above the cost of generic USB wireless adapters, but it is also targeting a more specific role: enabling multi-gigabit wireless client connectivity in environments that already have the access point infrastructure to support it.

You can buy the Airwire via the link below – doing so will result in a small commission coming to me and Eddie at NASCompares, and allows us to keep doing what we do! 

UniFi Airwire – Design

The UniFi AirWire has a noticeably different physical design to the compact USB WiFi adapters that are typically associated with desktop or laptop client upgrades. At 117 x 117 x 42.5 mm and 537 g, it is much closer in appearance to a standalone wireless bridge or directional client than a conventional dongle. That larger enclosure is directly tied to its intended function, as Ubiquiti is clearly building around higher power operation, larger antenna structures, and the thermal requirements that come with sustained WiFi 7 activity across multiple radios.

The housing is made of polycarbonate and includes a fold-out top section that appears to be part of the antenna assembly and directional positioning of the unit. This gives the AirWire a more deliberate deployment profile, where placement and orientation are likely to matter more than they would with an internal laptop radio or a low-profile USB adapter. On the front, there is also a 0.96-inch status display, which provides at-a-glance information during setup and operation without needing to rely entirely on software feedback from the host system.

From a practical standpoint, the design reflects that this is not intended to be an invisible add-on for casual wireless use. It is an external client device built to sit on a desk or near a workstation, with a form factor that prioritizes radio performance and signal handling over portability. That makes it less discreet than mainstream client adapters, but it also aligns with the product’s stated purpose as a high-performance WiFi 7 endpoint for users trying to push beyond the limitations of standard integrated wireless hardware.

UniFi Airwire – Internal Hardware

Internally, the UniFi AirWire is built around a dual-band WiFi 7 architecture that focuses entirely on 5 GHz and 6 GHz operation, without any 2.4 GHz support. Ubiquiti rates the device as a 4-stream client, split across 2 x 2 MU-MIMO on 5 GHz and 2 x 2 MU-MIMO on 6 GHz.

This layout is central to its stated role as an STR MLO client, allowing both bands to be active simultaneously rather than relying on the more common single-radio behaviour seen in many current WiFi 7 client devices.

Ubiquiti also specifies a high-gain antenna design, with 11 dBi quoted on both 5 GHz and 6 GHz, which is significantly more aggressive than the antenna arrangements found in most integrated laptop or mobile WiFi hardware. Alongside this, the AirWire includes a dedicated scanning radio for real-time spectral analysis. That separate scanning capability is notable because it suggests the unit is not just focused on link speed, but also on monitoring local RF conditions and interference in parallel with normal client operation.

The trade-off for that hardware approach is power and thermals. Ubiquiti lists maximum power consumption at 18 W, with USB PD 5/9/12V support and separate normal and performance power profiles. In practical terms, that places the AirWire closer to a compact external network appliance than a typical USB wireless adapter. It also helps explain the larger chassis, the need for external power flexibility, and the expectation that sustained performance operation will demand more cooling headroom than a smaller bus-powered client device could realistically provide.

UniFi Airwire – Connectivity

The UniFi AirWire connects to the host system over USB-C, but from a networking perspective it is presented as a 5 GbE interface over USB 3.2 Gen 2. That distinction matters, because although the wireless side of the device is rated far higher in combined theoretical bandwidth, the host connection places an upper practical ceiling on what can be delivered to the attached PC, laptop, or workstation. In effect, the AirWire is designed to behave more like an external multi-gig network adapter than a conventional USB WiFi dongle.

On the wireless side, the AirWire operates on 5 GHz and 6 GHz only, with support for WiFi 7, WiFi 6, WiFi 5, and 802.11n data rates across a wide range of channel widths. Ubiquiti lists support for EHT 20/40/80/160/240/320 MHz, alongside HE, VHT, and HT modes on earlier standards. The maximum quoted link rates are 5.8 Gbps on 6 GHz using 320 MHz bandwidth and 4.3 Gbps on 5 GHz using 240 MHz bandwidth, though actual results will depend heavily on access point capability, spectrum availability, regional channel restrictions, and signal conditions.

Power delivery is also part of the connection design. Ubiquiti specifies USB PD 5/9/12V support, with 15 W in normal mode and 20 W in performance mode, while maximum device power consumption is listed at 18 W. This means that, depending on how the host system is connected and powered, full performance operation may require more than a single low-power USB port can reliably provide. That makes cable quality, port specification, and available USB power budget more relevant here than they would be for standard client adapters.

The AirWire also includes support for wireless meshing and real-time spectral analysis, which extends its connection role beyond basic client access. In a UniFi environment, setup is intended to be handled through UniFi AutoLink for rapid onboarding, reducing the need for separate client-side software installation. Even so, the broader connection experience will still depend on the surrounding infrastructure, particularly whether the connected UniFi access point supports the required WiFi 7 and 6 GHz features needed for the AirWire to operate in the way it is being marketed.

Specification Details
Product Name UniFi AirWire
Model U-AirWire
Price $199.00
Dimensions 117 x 117 x 42.5 mm
Dimensions (Imperial) 4.6 x 4.6 x 1.7 in
Weight 537 g
Weight (Imperial) 1.2 lb
WiFi Standard WiFi 7
Spatial Streams 4
Uplink WiFi
MIMO 6 GHz 2 x 2 (DL/UL MU-MIMO)
MIMO 5 GHz 2 x 2 (DL/UL MU-MIMO)
Max Data Rate 6 GHz 5.8 Gbps (BW320)
Max Data Rate 5 GHz 4.3 Gbps (BW240)
Antenna Gain 6 GHz 11 dBi
Antenna Gain 5 GHz 11 dBi
Max TX Power 6 GHz 20 dBm
Max TX Power 5 GHz 25 dBm
Supported Standards 802.11be, 802.11ax, 802.11ac, 802.11n
802.11be Data Rates 7.3 Mbps to 5.8 Gbps
802.11ax Data Rates 7.3 Mbps to 2.4 Gbps
802.11ac Data Rates 6.5 Mbps to 1.7 Gbps
802.11n Data Rates 6.5 Mbps to 300 Mbps
Wireless Meshing Yes
Real-Time Spectral Analysis Yes
Max Power Consumption 18 W
Power Supply USB PD 5/9/12V, 15 W normal mode, 20 W performance mode
Networking Interface 1 x 5 GbE port (USB 3.2 Gen 2)
Management USB-C
Enclosure Material Polycarbonate
Display 0.96 in status display
Channel Bandwidth HT 20/40, VHT 20/40/80/160, HE 20/40/80/160, EHT 20/40/80/160/240/320 MHz
NDAA Compliant Yes
Certifications CE, FCC, IC
Operating Temperature -10 to 40 °C
Operating Humidity 5 to 95% non-condensing

UniFi Airwire – Verdict?

The UniFi AirWire is a more specialised product than its USB-C connection initially suggests. Rather than serving as a low-cost way to add basic WiFi 7 support to a system, it is designed to address a specific gap in the current client ecosystem: the lack of widely available true multi-radio MLO hardware on the device side. Its value therefore depends less on headline wireless specifications alone and more on whether the surrounding network environment is already capable of taking advantage of simultaneous 5 GHz and 6 GHz operation, wider channel support, and multi-gigabit client throughput.

On that basis, the AirWire appears to be an interesting but clearly targeted piece of hardware. The larger chassis, higher power requirements, directional design, and likely dependency on a strong WiFi 7 6 GHz deployment mean it is not a universal client upgrade for every user. However, for users already invested in UniFi WiFi 7 infrastructure and looking for a higher performance external client than the current mainstream market provides, it introduces a form factor and feature set that are still relatively uncommon. Whether that translates into a meaningful real-world advantage will depend on testing, particularly around sustained throughput, latency behaviour, thermal limits, and the practical impact of STR MLO outside of ideal conditions.

You can buy the Airwire via the link below – doing so will result in a small commission coming to me and Eddie at NASCompares, and allows us to keep doing what we do! 

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Linux sur Mac avec Fedora Asahi Remix 43 (mais pas tous les Mac)

Par : Korben
18 mars 2026 à 18:33

Linux sur un Mac Apple Silicon en 2026 serait-ce enfin une option viable ?

En effet, Fedora Asahi Remix 43 vient de sortir et la réponse est... ça dépend de votre Mac. Si vous êtes sur M1 ou M2, ça commence à être sérieux. M3 ? Ça boote depuis janvier mais c'est pas encore utilisable au quotidien. M4, on en est loin. Et M5, ils ne connaissent pas encore...

Du coup, pour ceux qui se demandent quel Linux installer sur un Mac à base de puce Apple, c'est clairement le choix le plus abouti du moment. La grosse news de cette version, c'est l'arrivée du support Mac Pro (le gros desktop à plusieurs milliers d'euros, oui oui). Y'a aussi les micros qui fonctionnent enfin sur les MacBook Pro et Max en M2, et le 120Hz qui débarque sur les MacBook Pro 14 et 16 pouces. Côté bureau, c'est KDE Plasma 6.6 par défaut avec GNOME 49 en alternative, et sous le capot, RPM 6.0 et le backend DNF5 pour la gestion des paquets.

Pour l'installer, c'est toujours la même commande magique :

curl https://fedora-asahi-remix.org/install | sh

Ça se lance directement depuis macOS, ça partitionne votre SSD et ça pose le tout en dual boot. Votre système Apple reste donc intact à côté, et si ça ne vous plaît pas, vous pouvez tout virer proprement. Et si vous êtes déjà sur une version précédente (41 ou 42), la mise à jour passe par DNF System Upgrade ou Plasma Discover. Par contre, oubliez GNOME Software pour les montées de version, ça marche pas encore !

Sauf que... y'a un gros "MAIS" !

En effet, tout ça ne fonctionne qu'avec les puces M1 et M2 donc si vous avez un Mac récent en M3, ça bootera oui, mais le GPU tournera en mode software (LLVMpipe), donc ce sera hyper lent. Et en M4... bah c'est carrément pas encore prêt.

Parce que oui, le reverse-engineering des GPU d'Apple, c'est un boulot de titan, car depuis le départ d'Asahi Lina qui bossait sur le premier driver DRM en Rust du noyau Linux, ça avance forcément moins vite côté graphique. D'ailleurs, quand je vous en avais parlé la première fois en 2022 , le Bluetooth et Thunderbolt manquaient déjà à l'appel... et c'est toujours pas complètement réglé ! En février 2025, le fondateur du projet Hector Martin avait aussi jeté l'éponge, et on se demandait si le truc allait survivre . Visiblement, l'équipe restante (dont Neal Gompa et Davide Cavalca) a décidé de pas lâcher l'affaire 💪.

Côté perf GPU, le driver open source Honeykrisp est désormais conforme Vulkan 1.3 et grâce à l'émulation x86 via FEX + DXVK, des jeux AAA comme Cyberpunk 2077 ou The Witcher 3 tournent sur M1/M2. C'est encore en alpha, faut pas s'attendre à du 60 fps et il faut 16 Go de RAM minimum, mais des jeux indés comme Hollow Knight tournent également déjà à pleine vitesse. Tout ça en reverse-engineering sans aucune doc constructeur... c'est quand même beau ! (Et pas merci Apple pour la transparence, hein...).

Y'a aussi une variante Fedora Server pour ceux qui voudraient transformer leur Mac en serveur headless, ce qui est une utilisation un peu dingue d'une machine à ce prix-là, mais bon, chacun son délire ! Et aussi une image minimale pour les bidouilleurs qui veulent tout construire à la main. Voilà.

Voili voilou, si vous avez un M1 ou M2 sous la main, c'est le moment de tester. Et pour le reste, encore un peu de patience.

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Vous rêvez des couleurs du MacBook Neo sur votre Mac ? C’est possible avec une simple commande

14 mars 2026 à 11:04

Apple permet de personnaliser l'apparence du système avec des couleurs différentes quand vous sélectionnez du texte ou cliquez sur un bouton. Les trois couleurs du MacBook Neo sont officiellement réservées au nouvel ordinateur d'Apple, mais il est possible de les débloquer avec une commande Terminal.

Test du MacBook Neo : Apple réussit (presque) tout avec son ordinateur à 699 euros

10 mars 2026 à 14:00

Pendant plusieurs jours, j'ai fait du MacBook Neo mon seul et unique ordinateur. Le produit frôle l'excellence : Apple sort un des meilleurs rapports qualité-prix de son histoire malgré quelques défauts inévitables. Que vaut l'A18 Pro ? Quelles sont les limites des 8 Go de RAM ? Et quelles sont les différences par rapport au MacBook Air ? Les réponses dans ce test complet.

Les artefacts de Claude détournés pour piéger les utilisateurs de macOS avec un malware infostealer

16 février 2026 à 08:53

En abusant du système d'Artefacts de Claude et de Google Ads, les pirates cherchent à piéger les utilisateurs de macOS dans le cadre d'attaques ClickFix.

Le post Les artefacts de Claude détournés pour piéger les utilisateurs de macOS avec un malware infostealer a été publié sur IT-Connect.

Action1: Patch Management for Windows, macOS, and Linux

Par : IT Experts
10 février 2026 à 13:51
From the Dashboard page, you can double-click any widget to drill down to more specific dashboards, run actions, or discover more details
Action1 is a cloud-based autonomous endpoint management platform focused on patch management, vulnerability assessment, and software deployment. The December release significantly expanded the platform by introducing native Linux agent support and an enterprise-wide management view, thereby strengthening Action1’s suitability for organizations managing heterogeneous, distributed environments.

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