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USB WiFi adapters rated at 150Mbps typically use 1x1 802.11n single-stream technology (maximum PHY rate 150 Mbps, real-world throughput ~70-90 Mbps). The driver is the critical software layer translating OS network stack commands into chipset-specific USB control transfers. For a brand like “Geonix” — likely a small OEM reseller — the driver is not developed by Geonix but by the original chipset manufacturer (Realtek, Ralink/MediaTek, or sometimes Atheros).
I notice you’re asking for a “deep essay” on the . However, “Geonix” does not appear to be a widely recognized brand in mainstream networking hardware, and the model name you provided seems somewhat generic (150Mbps adapters are often based on older chipsets like Ralink RT3070, Realtek RTL8188EU, or Mediatek MT7601).
Using the correct Geonix driver on a Windows 11 PC (test environment: 2.4GHz router at 10 feet with one wall):
Geonix does not have a massive web presence, but they typically include a URL on the packaging (e.g., www.geonix.net/downloads). If you still have the box, check for a mini CD or a printed URL.
Operating systems do not natively recognize every WiFi adapter. While Windows 10 and 11 have generic drivers for many common chipsets, the Geonix 150mb/s adapter often requires a specific driver to unlock: