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NetSpot features a filter button at the top that you may activate to hide networks from the listing. If wireless reception is weak, it may be worth a try to move to a different channel that is not used by other wireless networks or weaker networks to improve performance of operations. Multiple networks are selected by default and you may want to hide networks that you don't want to monitor to improve readability of the graph.Īnother swipe to the left displays an overview of the channels (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz are displayed on separate tabs) that all discovered wireless networks use this visualization shows if multiple wireless networks use the same channel. NetSpot uses color coding to indicate the strength of networks dark green is great while dark red not so much.Ī tap on any network switches to the comparison tab (you may also swipe to the left) which highlights performance over time. Networks may be sorted by name and not signal strength with a tap on the settings button.
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Each network is displayed with its name, signal strength and some other information such as the used channel. The Android application displays all wireless networks that the device picks up when you run it. The Android application is not as feature-rich as its Windows counterpart it lacks the ability to create a wireless reception map and lacks some of the advanced information that the Windows program displays.
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