- ASUS PROART-CABILITY Router 7 PRT-BE59 can move 30 GB files wirelessly in less than one minute
- Proart Creator Switch 10S PQG-U1080 pushes wired-flow to 40 gbps
- Asus New Switch has eight 2.5 g gates and two 10g uplinks
Asus has expanded its proart lineup to Studio Networking with two devices designed to move very large files more efficiently.
The Proart Cabinet Router 7 PRT-BE59 introduces the Wi-Fi 7 wireless speeds of up to 5,000 Mbps, while the ProART creator Switch 10S PQG-U1080 supports a high-level changing capacity above its wired ports.
According to ASUS, these devices reduce bottlenecks when handling 8K video, comprehensive image libraries or collaborative editing projects where delays can undermine productivity.
A wireless backbone for creative projects
The Proart Cabinet Router 7 PRT-BE59 Dual-Band Wi-Fi 7 connection can move about 30 GB of project files in less than one minute, giving Studios the opportunity to share large data sets without long delays.
ASUS hits this as critical for tasks such as synchronizing project files for sky storage, streaming content in high resolution and enabling real -time collaboration.
Although its specifications are similar to those promoted by the best wi-fi and game routers, this device is aimed at professional studios, where stable performance is more important than entertainment.
On the wired side, the router includes a 2.5 g wan port, a 2.5 g LAN port and three 1g LAN gates.
Although these may be sufficient for mixed wireless and wired setups, the modest ones remain compared to what advanced production environments typically require.
To fill this hole, the ASUS Proart Creator introduced Switch 10S PQG-U1080, offering eight 2.5 g gates for routine wired tasks and two 10g SFP+ uplinks for heavier flow.
This configuration supports up to 40 Gbps switching, a number ASUS positions as needed for the rapid movement of 8K recordings and at the same time editing across multiple workstations.
Whether many studios can actually be saturated this capacity is uncertain because there is already a company-class switches with comparable specifications.
In a controlled demo, Asus illustrated how these devices could work in practice.
A travel router and a 5G device caught media in the field, which was transferred safely to a study of VPN.
Inside the studio, the Proart Router Distributed 7 files over Wi-Fi 7, while Proart Switch 10S handled the wired transfers of up to 10g.
The process was presented as trouble -free from catching through editing, but the actual performance depends on the real -world independent reviews, not a laboratory -controlled demo.
These devices show the potential of reducing delays in demanding workflows, but it is still unclear whether they can displace established corporate networking equipment that professionals are already dependent on.
Via Guru of 3D



