Homedale is a portable free tool which detects nearby wireless
access points, displays their details, and plots signal strength over
time.
Launch the program and its "Access Points" tab provides an in-depth
report on your network neighbours, including their name, MAC address,
vendor, signal strength, encryption, country ID, mode, frequency, band,
first and last seen times, supported bitrates, model and adapter. A
convenient right-click menu allows you to connect to (or disconnect
from) any particular access point.
An "Access Point Signal Graph" page plots signal strength over time.
Run Homedale on a laptop and you'll be able to access connection quality
in various locations. Right-clicking the graph displays options to save
it as an image, or log the signal strength data to a text file.
A "Location" tab uses Google Geolocation and Mozilla Location Service
to locate your current position on a map. Not exactly essential, but
worth trying once, just to see if it works. (For us: Google did, Mozilla
didn't.)
Homedale also has one or two useful configuration options. For
example, by default it removes access points once they've disappeared
for 1 minute, so you're only ever seeing active networks. Tell Homedale
to never remove them and the report will list every detected network,
whether it's currently active or not.
Version 1.58:
- New: 5GHz 80/160MHz info added, Channel usage supports 5GHz now, Connect to WPA Enterprise support added
- New: 5GHz 80/160MHz info added, Channel usage supports 5GHz now, Connect to WPA Enterprise support added
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