Not many people know this, but there is a wall filled with lava lamps in San Francisco that helps keep our internet secure. Cloudflare’s office lobby has a “Wall of Entropy,” a bank of about 100 lava lamps whose constantly shifting, gooey patterns are filmed by a camera. The video feed is converted into a stream of unpredictable, random bytes that helps create cryptographic keys to encrypt a significant chunk of the world’s web traffic. It is a brilliant, whimsical solution to a serious digital problem and perhaps the first instance of a piece of home decor serving a grander purpose in our connected world. Huawei’s new X3 Pro, a sculptural tabletop mesh router that looks like a tiny, self-contained icy mountain, might just be the second.
For years, the router has been the ugliest, most unloved piece of tech in the house. A black or white plastic box bristling with spidery antennas and blinking lights, it is the sort of device you shove behind a bookshelf or a plant, hoping no one notices it. The irony, of course, is that the best place for a router is out in the open, where its signal can propagate freely. Huawei seems to have taken this problem to heart, deciding that if a router has to be visible, it might as well be beautiful. The X3 Pro is the result: a tall, translucent cone that houses a textured, mountain-like sculpture. It looks less like networking hardware and more like an art glass piece you would find in a museum gift shop.
Designer: Huawei
The design is not just for show; it is deeply functional. The antennas, the components that are usually the most visually offensive part of a router, are cleverly hidden inside that central mountain core. The lighting is not a series of distracting blue and green status LEDs but a soft, ambient glow that shifts between warm, fiery amber and cool, glacial white throughout the day, mimicking a sunrise over a peak. It is designed to be a conversation piece, a calm presence on a coffee table that encourages you to place it right in the center of your living space, which is exactly where it will perform best.
Beneath that serene exterior, the X3 Pro is a thoroughly modern piece of networking equipment. It is a Wi-Fi 7 system, offering combined theoretical speeds of up to 3570 Mbps across its 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. The main unit is equipped with two 2.5 Gbps Ethernet ports and one 1 Gbps port, providing enough bandwidth for multi-gig internet plans or a high-speed connection to a network-attached storage (NAS) drive.
Perhaps its most practical feature for challenging homes is its hybrid mesh technology. The system comes with a smaller, equally elegant satellite node. In addition to using Wi-Fi to create a mesh network, the X3 Pro supports PLC 3.0, or Power Line Communication. This allows the router and its nodes to use your home’s existing electrical wiring as a stable, wired backhaul. For anyone living in a home with thick concrete or brick walls that kill Wi-Fi signals, this is a game-changer, offering a more reliable connection between nodes than Wi-Fi alone can provide.
Everything is managed through Huawei’s Smart Life app, which handles setup, security features like WPA3, and specialized modes like Game Turbo for reducing latency. It is a complete package that marries high-end performance with a design that finally respects the aesthetics of a modern home. The X3 Pro makes a compelling argument that the most important devices in our lives do not have to be ugly. Just like those lava lamps in San Francisco, it proves that sometimes the best technology is the kind you actually want to look at.
The post The Huawei X3 Pro Wi-Fi Router Is What Happens When a Mesh Router Meets a Lava Lamp first appeared on Yanko Design.

