The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘WiFi’ Category

Dell Inspiron 17R/5737 with Windows 10 does not understand 802.11n

Posted by jpluimers on 2016/12/19

Learned the hard way that relatively recent equipment like a Dell Inspiron 17R/5737 with Windows 10 does not do 802.11n despite Dell claiming “Dell™ Wireless 1705 802.11b/g/n with Bluetooth v4.0”.

I discovered it while hooking it up to a Huawei E5577Cs which by default is configured for 5Ghz 802.11n and the Dell not seeing it at all despite up-to-date drivers.

Both an iPad and an LG Android phone would immediately see it.

Switching the Huawei to use 2.4Ghz WiFi immediately made the Dell see it.

Windows 10 installed an Intel® Wireless-N 7260 driver and I could not find any settings that make the 802.11n work.

–jeroen

 

Posted in Power User, WiFi, Windows, Windows 10 | Leave a Comment »

How to Prevent Windows 10 From Automatically Downloading Updates – metered connections

Posted by jpluimers on 2016/12/12

Prevent Automatic Downloading of Updates on a Specific Connection

When you set a connection as “metered,” Windows 10 won’t automatically download updates on it. Windows 10 will automatically set certain types of connections — cellular data connections, for example — as metered. However, you can set any connection like as a metered connection.

A friend is trying this as he’s on roaming data using a Mobile WiFi hotspot. Lets see if this works…

Source: How to Prevent Windows 10 From Automatically Downloading Updates

–jeroen

Posted in Power User, WiFi, Windows, Windows 10 | Leave a Comment »

Some links to get WDS to work with Tomato

Posted by jpluimers on 2016/11/21

Just in case I ever need this: some links to get WDS working on Tomato based routers and have seamless WiFi handover.

And if I want to do it with a few Fritz!Box devices:

–jeroen

Posted in Power User, WDS, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

Drivers and firmware for WL-330NUL and ASIX AX88772 based USB ethernet adapter

Posted by jpluimers on 2016/05/05

Just in case I need this ever again: WL-330NUL | Networking | ASUS Global?

ASUS WL-330NUL

Why? Well, I have such a device (see below), and somehow managed to kick it out of the network adapters list (it was “USB Network Interface”) and re-inserting it didn’t make it appear in the list of network adapters.

The solution should be this:

They just release new firmware Version 3.0.0.41, which work well with OSX 10.10.2

Source: OS X Yosemite problem with ethernet adapter/eth… | Apple Support Communities

That isn’t the full story though, as I had to follow these steps:

  1. update the firmware (from a Windows VM: VMware Fusion allowed me to pass the USB through)
  2. reboot the Mac
  3. insert the WL-330NUL USB adapter
  4. in the “Network” part of “System Preferences”, press the Plus sign in the lower left
  5. add the “USB Network Interface” (which wasn’t available before step 1, and isn’t available when you forget step 3) and press “Create”
  6. press “Apply”
  7. choose the “USB Network Interface” and click “Advanced”
  8. in the dialog, click “Hardware”
  9. verify if there is information for “MAC Address”
  10. click on “TCP/IP”
  11. insert a network cable connected to a DHCP network
  12. check if the WL-330NUL gets an IP-address through DHCP
  13. cancel out of the dialog
  14. close the “Network” window

I’m using the WL-330NUL (I have a few of them) because of Is it my thunderbolt ethernet adapter, or is it… | Apple Support Communities. Though it does no gigabit (the WL-330NUL does 10/100 Mbit/s and 2.4 Ghz WiFi but it is a WiFi to WiFi router which is very useful for being on the road). I hardly need gigabit speeds and when I do, I can usually cope with the flaky thunderbolt ethernet adapter.

ASIX AX88772 based

I also have a ASIX AX88772 based USB ethernet adapter that I bought way back earlier. That one has two drawbacks: a much longer and fragile USB cable and the need to download additional drivers. They are very cheap though, for instance at DX (plain, ab or c) or Alibaba (plain, ab or c).

If you want to use an ASIX AX88772 based ethernet adapter (most only do 10/100 Mbit/s), then:

  1. Check if you have the kext (as you might need to uninstall it) using the steps at OS X 10.10 “Yosemite” Ethernet Adapter Problems? We can help! | Plugable
  2. Follow the steps at Getting non-Apple (AX88772) USB Ethernet to work on Mavericks ← Putztastic Tech, summarised:
    1. Obtain the latest driver from AX88772 – ASIX Electronics Corporation
    2. If you had an old driver: uninstall the old one
    3. Install the new driver
    4. Reboot

For the future, I’m considering gigabit USB (likely future Macbooks don’t have Thunderbolt any more) based on AX88179 (USB 3). They are relatively cheap as well at DX (AX88179) or Alibaba (AX88179). There is also AX88178/A (USB 2, limiting it to 480 Mbit/s) but they are not available on DX or Alibaba.

–jeroen

via: Just ordered a WL-330NUL – Overview as it can WiFi to WiFi, wired to WiFi, wired to USB, WiFi to USB, … both ways, and can do MAC spoofing so that you only need to captive portal once. « The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Posted in Power User, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

WiFi networks that support seamless handover

Posted by jpluimers on 2015/12/07

It looks like Ubiquiti UniFi can do this, can others? How good are they? Price points?

If so, please comment.

–jeroen

via: Another update on my Ubiquiti UniFi network, since I today noticed another…

Posted in Power User, Ubiquiti, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

Too many WLANs…

Posted by jpluimers on 2015/09/21

32 WLANs just on the ground floor…

Name (SSID) Channel MAC Address
ASUS-RT-N66U-PSO-1-2.4 6 10:BF:48:D3:3D:20
ASUS-RT-N66U-PSO-1-5 44 10:BF:48:D3:3D:24
UPC0053284 1 80:C6:AB:08:89:88
Ziggo 1 82:C6:AB:08:89:8A
WLAE-AG300N-PSO-2 11 4C:E6:76:0F:50:42
FRITZ!Box 7490 13 34:31:C4:CE:CE:AE
ASUS-RT-N66U-PSO-2-Tomato24 6 10:BF:48:D2:F5:E8
FRITZ!Box 7490 36 34:31:C4:CE:CE:AF
H368N8D6382 8 34:4D:EA:8D:63:82
Sitecom303E5E 11 64:D1:A3:30:3E:5E
KPN Fon 8 62:4D:EA:8D:63:83
VGV75198FB7F6 11 84:9C:A6:8F:B7:F6
Sitecom2eb939 6 64:D1:A3:2E:B9:3B
Sitecom_ee8c98 11 00:0C:F6:EE:8C:98
UPC515789 1 E8:40:F2:80:68:CF
dLAN Netwerk 11 BC:F2:AF:B5:C9:4A
ASUS-RT-N66U-PSO-2-Tomato50 36 10:BF:48:D2:F5:EC
Sitecom327664 3 64:D1:A3:32:76:64
Prins Maurits Experia 1 4C:09:D4:20:CC:55
VGV7519FC7C1C 3 4C:09:D4:FC:7C:1C
Ziggo 1 EA:40:F2:80:68:C1
UPC245262667 1 DC:71:44:80:6D:48
Sitecom0DDDD0 9 64:D1:A3:0D:DD:D0
VGV7519BD731C 13 88:03:55:BD:73:1C
Ziggo 13 82:C6:AB:2A:5A:A2
UPC0041308 13 80:C6:AB:2A:5A:A0
UPC0053284 1 84:1B:5E:39:B9:68
UPC738371 1 E8:40:F2:94:35:87
Miami Beach 1 9C:C7:A6:AA:CA:59
Ziggo 1 EA:40:F2:94:35:89
UPC2612067 6 88:F7:C7:4F:27:12


view raw

WLANs.md

hosted with ❤ by GitHub

The top floors are even worse. Some of them are mine, so I want to find a seamless handover for that. Which I only can do if I’ve merged my various networks that connect to the WiFi devices into a big one.

That requires a good but competitively priced multi-WAN router which I’m still searching for: any hints for such a device are welcome as well as configuration tips.

Some people seem to love Ubiquity, even for seamless. Are those straightforward to configure?

–jeroen

PS: Converted from my Fritz!Box copied Wireless Radio Networks table

Easily create tables in extended Markdown format supported by Markdown Here and GFM.

Source: Markdown Tables generator – TablesGenerator.com

Posted in Power User, Ubiquiti, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

Just ordered a WL-330NUL – Overview as it can WiFi to WiFi, wired to WiFi, wired to USB, WiFi to USB, … both ways, and can do MAC spoofing so that you only need to captive portal once.

Posted by jpluimers on 2015/02/10

Just ordered a an ASUS WL-330NUL  as it can WiFi to WiFi, wired to WiFi, wired to USB and WiFi to USB; both ways, and can do MAC spoofing so that you only need to captive portal once.

Thanks David Conran for writing this:

It most certainly does wifi to wifi.

I’ve used it extensively to do that. Even powering it off a USB battery pack to give me decent wifi in the rest of the room, where I could only get the hotel wifi next to the room door.

Yes, it means you can run a chromecast on it. I’ve done this regularly. i.e. This router and a chromecast are part of my travel kit.

Other pluses are, all my phones/tablets/laptops know the SSID/password of the 330NUL. No config needed, just sign into the router(*) and connect to it to the hotel wifi (once per first visit) and then when you sign in to the hotel wifi on one of your devices, you’ve signed in for all of them. Yay for NAT.

(* The only negative issue I have with the 330NUL, is you can’t change the fecking login password on it. It’s printed on the side though and is pseudo random.)

–jeroen

via Can’t remember whether I’ve mentioned this before. This little router is an….

Posted in Power User, WiFi | 1 Comment »

Wireshark · WPA PSK Generator (has SHA1 JavaScript source)

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/04/14

Might come in useful one day: Wireshark · WPA PSK Generator.

–jeroen

Posted in Development, Internet, JavaScript/ECMAScript, Power User, Scripting, Software Development, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

Quick Tip: Automating your Mac’s wifi power (on off through script) via: BrettTerpstra.com

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/03/04

Interesting commands around networksetup -setairportpower en0 : power off and on your WiFi.

–jeroen

via: [Wayback/Archive] Quick Tip: Automating your Mac’s wifi power – BrettTerpstra.com.

Posted in Apple, Hardware, Mac, Mac OS X / OS X / MacOS, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, MacBook, MacBook Retina, MacBook-Air, MacBook-Pro, Network-and-equipment, OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, OS X 10.9 Mavericks, Power User, WiFi | Leave a Comment »

Doesn’t automatically power up when utility power is restored: Buffalo WLAE-AG300N Dual-Band Wireless-N Ethernet Converter Access Point and Bridge

Posted by jpluimers on 2013/08/19

I got myself two Buffalo WLAE-AG300N devices to function as a WiFi bridge (I couldn’t run an ethernet cable from A to B, but both devices there were wired).

Just found out that when you loose utility power, and it comes back up, then these devices do not automatically power up: you *have* to press the power button.

Bummer.

–jeroen

via: WLAE-AG300N : AirStation™ Nfiniti™ Dual-Band Wireless-N Ethernet Converter Access Point and Bridge.

Posted in Power User, WiFi | 1 Comment »