Legacy Hardware Chokes Global Internet: Outdated Networks Slow Modern Devices

June 9, 2026
Legacy Hardware Chokes Global Internet: Outdated Networks Slow Modern Devices
  • Global internet connectivity relies on wireless infrastructure, but a large portion of traffic still travels over outdated hardware, according to new research.

  • Legacy hardware mainly bottlenecks performance through signal congestion in the 2.4 GHz band, reducing bandwidth available for newer devices and services.

  • The study highlights a systemic gap between device capabilities and home network conditions, which hurts consumer experiences with streaming, gaming, and other bandwidth-heavy activities.

  • While the 5 GHz band now carries about 60% of wireless traffic, this shift toward higher-capacity frequencies has not been universally adopted in homes.

  • Residential infrastructure upgrades are lagging behind mobile device advances, creating bottlenecks where modern devices underperform on old home networks.

  • Ookla data shows Wi‑Fi 4, introduced in 2009, still accounts for roughly one-third of global network samples, meaning hundreds of millions rely on legacy infrastructure.

Summary based on 1 source


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