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hello
i was so looking forward to getting my new x10 mini pro only to find a few faults some of which i can live with until 2.1 comes out (should really be 2.2 & sooner) but i cannt seem to connect to my wireless router.
i have tried several different methods, including going through all the wireless channels on the router, enable mac address filter and have only my x10 set, try all the differents security settings - but still i cannot get my phone to obtain an ip address before it gives me the unsuccessful message.
so went to mcdonalds tried their openzone and connected fine to their network.
now my next guess would be is my router is old (about 4 years maybe more) linksys WRT54GS so anyone know of any problems with specific routers at all?
i know i had problems setting up my godsons ipod touch with my router, but didnt dig any deeper on it as he wasnt fussed about it at the time - so think it could be that but will hold off rushing out to get a new router for a while yet, probably to test some other peoples routers first.
Is you SSID hidden?
I have found that on some routers, Android phones in general won't connect if the SSID is hidden.
clarkee013 said:
hello
i was so looking forward to getting my new x10 mini pro only to find a few faults some of which i can live with until 2.1 comes out (should really be 2.2 & sooner) but i cannt seem to connect to my wireless router.
i have tried several different methods, including going through all the wireless channels on the router, enable mac address filter and have only my x10 set, try all the differents security settings - but still i cannot get my phone to obtain an ip address before it gives me the unsuccessful message.
so went to mcdonalds tried their openzone and connected fine to their network.
now my next guess would be is my router is old (about 4 years maybe more) linksys WRT54GS so anyone know of any problems with specific routers at all?
i know i had problems setting up my godsons ipod touch with my router, but didnt dig any deeper on it as he wasnt fussed about it at the time - so think it could be that but will hold off rushing out to get a new router for a while yet, probably to test some other peoples routers first.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The WRT54GS should be a perfect router to use.
Make sure you are running latest dd-wrt firmware on it, setup wifi security as : WPA2 Personal Mixed, TKIP+AES
I have these settings and phone connects easily.
Its a good router, do as above poster advised and definitely get latest firmware on. Try going on just G mode if there's no B-only old wifi gadgets in your house.
Sent from my U20i using XDA App
I noticed my wife's X10 mini won't connect to Channels 12 and 13. If your router is on one of those channels, try moving it to 11.
I have difficulties connecting to my wifi router at home, SMC Barricade N2, WPA2 authentication, it works only after resetting the router.
Now after turning off TKIP cypher suite (only AES), it works perfectly
update: and also helped to enable static IP... but I am using wifi only @home
Had the same problem. Changed to Channels 11 and detected imediatly my wifi network.
Hi, I have a different problem with the wifi.
At work and some other connections I've seen to have an open wifi, which i can freely connect.
However, I am still unable to browse the internet as it requires some browser authentication.
I've seen other fones (Nokia and Iphone) have their browsers popup a webpage to input the credentials.
but my mini pro doesn't display this page.
i've already tried going directly to the login url manually but still doesn't display the login page.
someone told me that this might be a limitation of android but haven't seen any reports about it...
i also saw and tried 2 apps (Open Wifi Login and Browser Wifi Login) that should have solved this but did not.
Has anyone else had this experience?
Help please....
shameless self-bump
other fones seem to have the same issue but no solution...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=622326
help please
Following on from my investigations on why the SGS2 takes *so" long to re-establish a WiFi connection, it now seems part of the problem is a major delay in obtaining an IP address.
In another thread (I forget which one) it was suggested that slow WiFi could be caused by a router not being able to cope with 802.11b, g & n traffic at the same time, which got me thinking - what if I disable the n part of the WiFi on the phone to revert it to 802.11g - would this make acquisition time on an older router faster?
So - does anyone know which file / script etc. could be altered to keep WiFi enabled, but ONLY at 802.11g; not utilising 802.11n?
stuclark said:
Following on from my investigations on why the SGS2 takes *so" long to re-establish a WiFi connection, it now seems part of the problem is a major delay in obtaining an IP address.
In another thread (I forget which one) it was suggested that slow WiFi could be caused by a router not being able to cope with 802.11b, g & n traffic at the same time, which got me thinking - what if I disable the n part of the WiFi on the phone to revert it to 802.11g - would this make acquisition time on an older router faster?
So - does anyone know which file / script etc. could be altered to keep WiFi enabled, but ONLY at 802.11g; not utilising 802.11n?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just a guess, but is likely a build.prop tweak
Is this a frequent problem ? Has never happend here
Sent from my GT-I9100 using XDA App
As I've said in my post on the general forum, I get a horrible delay every time I ask the phone to connect WiFi.
I've got the WiFi sleep policy set to "when screen turns off" to save battery power; and using the same router as on my SGS (hell, i can sit the phones next to each other to try this) I get the following:
Waking the SGS up from a sleep results in a delay of 1 or 2 seconds before WiFi connects.
Doing the same with the SGS2 results in a delay of up to 1 minute before WiFi will connect. (sometimes it can be seen to give up trying to acquire an IP address, then try again)
...so yes, may be a router issue, but clearly there's something different between the 2.3.3. on the SGS versus the 2.3.3 on the SGS2 as well.
You could just disable n mode on your router if you think mixed mode is slowing it down. Most new routers will let you choose which wifi modes to broadcast via their web interface. The best option would be to only use n if all your devices support n.
Sent from my GT-I9100
Router only supports g. I'm suspecting the phone looks to n first, hence my interest in disabling it.
stuclark said:
As I've said in my post on the general forum, I get a horrible delay every time I ask the phone to connect WiFi.
I've got the WiFi sleep policy set to "when screen turns off" to save battery power; and using the same router as on my SGS (hell, i can sit the phones next to each other to try this) I get the following:
Waking the SGS up from a sleep results in a delay of 1 or 2 seconds before WiFi connects.
Doing the same with the SGS2 results in a delay of up to 1 minute before WiFi will connect. (sometimes it can be seen to give up trying to acquire an IP address, then try again)
...so yes, may be a router issue, but clearly there's something different between the 2.3.3. on the SGS versus the 2.3.3 on the SGS2 as well.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
quick side note, wifi sleep policy set to NEVER saves you much more battery power because when it switches over to 3g, 3g uses way more power than just leaving it on wifi. counter intuitive but true.
Have you tried hard coding an IP address on the S2?
And by Hard coding, he means manually setting a Static IP address and now allowing the DHCP to provide you an IP address each time. Although the IP will most likely be the same while using DHCP, it has to request and authenticate each time. Setting a Static IP address eliminates the process of "Asking" for a IP address each time.
when the phone scans and finds the ssid, as part of that scan it checks if the router supports b/g/n then will try to connect at the highest speed. If the router isnt n compatible it wont even try.
I don't want to give the phone a static IP as I regularly visit three or four different wireless networks and they don't all use the same IP range.
I do know how DHCP works, this isn't a newbie question.
It seems definite now, watching the phone, that it tries to connect once (presumably on n), fails, then re-connects (quickly) on g.
Of course, I'll be changing the router eventually; I'm just interested in what's going on first
stuclark said:
I don't want to give the phone a static IP as I regularly visit three or four different wireless networks and they don't all use the same IP range.
I do know how DHCP works, this isn't a newbie question.
It seems definite now, watching the phone, that it tries to connect once (presumably on n), fails, then re-connects (quickly) on g.
Of course, I'll be changing the router eventually; I'm just interested in what's going on first
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Understand about leaving it set for DHCP. Trying a fixed IP as a test may tell you if DHCP is part of the delay. If the b/g/n search is that slow it would be useful if it could be configured more precisely.
Have you tried it using another router using only g? If n is available it connects quickly? Seems like others would have mentioned this if it is something with the phone as g-only networks are still common.
I too am interested in disabling 802.11n. wpa_supplicant keeps hanging on some wifi networks and I suspect it may be because of n.
I am not able to connect my Transformer Prime with my new Asus N66U router. I tried all channels and security settings and it only connected when to the router with open system setting. I am able to connect it to my old Netgear WDR3700 in good speed without any problems. Does anyone run into similar situation?
I have the rt-n66u router as well and never had a problem. Are you sure you are using the right encryption settings, Do other devices connect, have you updated the router's firmware? There was a new update just today.
http://support.asus.com/download.as...T-N66U (VER.B1)&os=&hashedid=PZkFHlMrGWzVROxT
have you ensured your router has the latest firmware?
I have the N56u model and no issues.
Yes, I have the latest firmware. My Galaxy Nexus connects just fine. The Transformers Prime actually see the router with strong signal. It just refuses to connect to it. BTW I set the router using WPA-PSK.
Is your prime running the latest update? Or, have you tried DD-WRT?
I have the latest firmware in both devices. However, my Prime is the first batch and may suffers from wifi issues. I may have to try Tomato or Dd-wrt firmware.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Some routers let you disable the broadcasting of the network name (SSID). Computers/network cards that conform correctly with the 802.11 specification will refuse to connect. Have you checked the settings for both 2.4 and 5GHz? - of course the router should not allow disabling of the SSID!
odd. Try wiping the data. Small pin hole in back of router. Reset it. Then 192.168.1.1. go in there and reenter your SSID etc on wireless.
For ****s and giggles. Pump up your 80mw Tx power of wireless to around 160mw. I been running 160mw tx power for awhile and have not and any problems. This baby can go all the way up to 500mw. Of course that is U.S. FCC range limit. With 500mw you can see your wireless from few blocks away.
If your prime is connecting to your other wireless router. Then has to do with some setting in on the RTN66U. Hopefully the wipe will clear any setting in the firmware.
Forgot to mention. Your prime will only connect to the 2.4ghz. It won't connect to the 5ghz wireless.
Did that already. My Transformer does see the 2.4 Ghz SSID with very strong signal. It just keeps reconnecting and fails to connect again eventually. My Galaxy Nexus can connect in a very good speed. Change back to my old Netgear WDR3700 and my transformer connects to it right away. It seems to me that the problem is the security encryption as connection is established right away in open system. However, it just refuse to connect on whatever setting I tried.
ariesting said:
Did that already. My Transformer does see the 2.4 Ghz SSID with very strong signal. It just keeps reconnecting and fails to connect again eventually. My Galaxy Nexus can connect in a very good speed. Change back to my old Netgear WDR3700 and my transformer connects to it right away. It seems to me that the problem is the security encryption as connection is established right away in open system. However, it just refuse to connect on whatever setting I tried.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What are the WiFi standards on the Router set to?
Sometimes when a router is set to b/g/n (all combined) it can lead to issues.
I generally keep mine at b/g (no n) on the 2.4 Mhz band, since my n devices run on my router's 5 Ghz band anyway. Try that out.
I tried "auto", "legacy" and "n only" with or without "b and g protection" but still could not connect to the router in any combinations. Will like to know the feedback from anyone who put Tomato on N66U.
If you have kept the same SSID as your old router did you delete the old network settings for that SSID in your TP? Also try a new SSID on the router.
If the router supports WiFi Multimedia (WMM) try disabling it and re-enable it after a connection has been made.
I presume you would know if you had enabled an allowed devices table -MAC addresses. The only other thing I can think of is the size of the "hello I'm here" beacon that the router transmits is too long for the TP and I think that would only be an issue with a very long SSID
Yes, I do keep the old SSID. However, I did forget the network and reconnect to it again in Transformer. My SSID is less than 10 characters. It seems to me that the Transformer is not able to get an IP nor pass the authentication stage.
ariesting said:
Did that already. My Transformer does see the 2.4 Ghz SSID with very strong signal. It just keeps reconnecting and fails to connect again eventually. My Galaxy Nexus can connect in a very good speed. Change back to my old Netgear WDR3700 and my transformer connects to it right away. It seems to me that the problem is the security encryption as connection is established right away in open system. However, it just refuse to connect on whatever setting I tried.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well. Go under advanced settings and then Wireless.
Wireless -General tab.
Frequency click (2.4ghz).
Your SSID (name).
Hide SSID = (No)
Wireless Mode put in (N Only).
Control Channel (1).
Channel Bandwidth (20mhz).
Authentication Method (WPA2-Personal).
WPA Encryption (AES).
Enter your WPA Pre-Shared Key (password for SSID).
Network Key Rotation Interval to (0).
Wireless -Professional Tab
Frequency (2.4ghz)
Enable Radio (yes)
Date to Enable Radio (Check all days)
Set AP Isolatd (No)
Multicast Rate (Disable)
RTS (2347)
DTIM (3)
Beacon (100)
Enable TX burst (Enable)
Enable Wireless Multi (Disable)
Enable WMM (Enable)
Tx Power adjustment (80)
Try those settings. See what happens.
Will try it as soon as I get back home. Thanks.
I am finally able to get my Transformer connecting to my RT-N66U router by changing the SSID to a new one. The speed and range are not better to my old Netgear WDR3700 though. Thanks for all the help anyway.
ariesting said:
I am finally able to get my Transformer connecting to my RT-N66U router by changing the SSID to a new one. The speed and range are not better to my old Netgear WDR3700 though. Thanks for all the help anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good to hear!
I've had the occasional connectivity problem with mine, on certain routers I can get connection but no online connectivity.
some routers use a nonstandard DHCP range (i think it may the ones that utilise 192.168.1.x) anyway, if you encounter this it's simple to correct once you know you simply define a manual ip on the prime for that connection and voila! :>
ariesting said:
I am finally able to get my Transformer connecting to my RT-N66U router by changing the SSID to a new one. The speed and range are not better to my old Netgear WDR3700 though. Thanks for all the help anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cool. Glad you got it working.
Well you can always try and pump your TX power adjustment from the default 80 to 160 or more. I was able to increase my range. I think the max is like 500mw the chip is rated at. However, I havent tried that high. I don't want to burn out my chip. Plus heat increases dramatically at those higher mw's. You would have to toss a little laptop cooler underneath it. (run via the routers usb port there).
My connection problem happens again. Just in case someone has similar issue, I solve the problem by exchanging a new one from store.
ariesting said:
I am not able to connect my Transformer Prime with my new Asus N66U router. I tried all channels and security settings and it only connected when to the router with open system setting. I am able to connect it to my old Netgear WDR3700 in good speed without any problems. Does anyone run into similar situation?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the n66u too and have no issues.
I have had a Netgear Powerline Adapter system set up in my Bedroom (XAVNB2001) for the past year and a half, because the signal from my Cisco E4200 doesn't effectively reach up there. It has its own SSID, on the 2.4GHz band. It has been completely solid and reliable, and I use it all the time with my Verizon Samasung Galaxy Nexus (stock ROM 4.2.2), and Asus Infinity Tablet (stock ROM 4.2.1). My wife also used it without problem with her prior Motorola Droid 3.
But for reasons I can't identify, my wife's new Galaxy S4 won't connect to it. Also Stock ROM 4.2.2. Her phone sees the Adapter/SSID, and shows a strong signal when we're up there. I enter the passcode with the same encryption (WPA/WPA2 PSK) as I have on the other working devices, and it quickly goes to "Acquiring IP" but this never completes. It tries a couple of times, and usually ends up saying: "Network Disabled Because Internet Connection Is Slow." But it is not slow - works as fast with the other devices as when I'm connected to the Cisco downstairs near the Router. I have carefully entered the passcode (checking the box to show the characters to make sure I'm not putting in a typo) a dozen times.
There is no problem connecting her S4 to any other WiFi network we've encountered (to the Cisco downstairs directly, at my kids' houses, hotels, etc.).
I can't see any trouble-shooting steps to even identify the problem. Usually this is a no-brainer: you see the SSID, enter the passcode, and you're in. What could possibly be the problem here??
DLCPhoto said:
I have had a Netgear Powerline Adapter system set up in my Bedroom (XAVNB2001) for the past year and a half, because the signal from my Cisco E4200 doesn't effectively reach up there. It has its own SSID, on the 2.4GHz band. It has been completely solid and reliable, and I use it all the time with my Verizon Samasung Galaxy Nexus (stock ROM 4.2.2), and Asus Infinity Tablet (stock ROM 4.2.1). My wife also used it without problem with her prior Motorola Droid 3.
But for reasons I can't identify, my wife's new Galaxy S4 won't connect to it. Also Stock ROM 4.2.2. Her phone sees the Adapter/SSID, and shows a strong signal when we're up there. I enter the passcode with the same encryption (WPA/WPA2 PSK) as I have on the other working devices, and it quickly goes to "Acquiring IP" but this never completes. It tries a couple of times, and usually ends up saying: "Network Disabled Because Internet Connection Is Slow." But it is not slow - works as fast with the other devices as when I'm connected to the Cisco downstairs near the Router. I have carefully entered the passcode (checking the box to show the characters to make sure I'm not putting in a typo) a dozen times.
There is no problem connecting her S4 to any other WiFi network we've encountered (to the Cisco downstairs directly, at my kids' houses, hotels, etc.).
I can't see any trouble-shooting steps to even identify the problem. Usually this is a no-brainer: you see the SSID, enter the passcode, and you're in. What could possibly be the problem here??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You could try creating a static IP address using the MAC of the GS4 on your Cisco router. It sounds like it's authenticating, but unable to assign an IP for whatever reason.
Disable WiFi Multimedia (WMM) or the equivalent... BOOM! should work fine.
Also, if it's a MAC filter issue turn your MAC filtering off. If that is the issue your GS4 will connect instantly once MAC filtering is off.
Thanks for the replies.
I assigned a Static IP to the GS4 through the Router without difficulty. I then went to the GS4's settings for this SSID, changed it to Static IP, entered the assigned IP, kept the Gateway as 192.168.1.1, and changed the DNS settings to what is shown through IPCONFIG when I check my Desktop.
It now connected, but shows a DNS error when trying to go to a given website. So something funky is going on there. The phone shows a setting for "Network prefix length" and has a value of 24 - I've not encountered this before - should there be a different setting here?
There is no MAC filtering enabled, so that's ok.
"Disable WiFi Multimedia (WMM) or the equivalent" - where is this setting located? I don't see anything along those lines on the Phone, or in the Router's program??
DLCPhoto said:
Thanks for the replies.
I assigned a Static IP to the GS4 through the Router without difficulty. I then went to the GS4's settings for this SSID, changed it to Static IP, entered the assigned IP, kept the Gateway as 192.168.1.1, and changed the DNS settings to what is shown through IPCONFIG when I check my Desktop.
It now connected, but shows a DNS error when trying to go to a given website. So something funky is going on there. The phone shows a setting for "Network prefix length" and has a value of 24 - I've not encountered this before - should there be a different setting here?
There is no MAC filtering enabled, so that's ok.
"Disable WiFi Multimedia (WMM) or the equivalent" - where is this setting located? I don't see anything along those lines on the Phone, or in the Router's program??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure about Eric214's suggestion, but it sounds like it could help. Regarding the static IP, if you set it on the router, the phone should pick it up automatically without you needing to enter it manually. After you set the static IP on the router, does the phone still hang on Acquiring IP? If you HAD to manually enter, you could plug in the DNS address coming straight from your router, or Google's open-dns of 8.8.4.4 and 8.8.8.8 (I think that still works.)
ttupa said:
I'm not sure about Eric214's suggestion, but it sounds like it could help. Regarding the static IP, if you set it on the router, the phone should pick it up automatically without you needing to enter it manually. After you set the static IP on the router, does the phone still hang on Acquiring IP? If you HAD to manually enter, you could plug in the DNS address coming straight from your router, or Google's open-dns of 8.8.4.4 and 8.8.8.8 (I think that still works.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried it before, but tried it again - with the Static IP set up on the Router (using the "DHCP Reservation" option in the Router's program), and the Connection Settings on the GS4 for this SSID set to DHCP, all advanced settings at their default, it behaves the same way: Shows Acquiring IP, tries it twice, then shows the message I quoted above.
The Router remains set at Automatic Configuration/DHCP overall, with DHCP Reservation used to create a Static IP for this phone's MAC address. If this isn't the proper way to do this, let me know.
And with the Phone Settings for this SSID's WiFi set to Static IP, and the info entered as above, it quickly connects, but doesn't gain internet access.
It shouldn't be this hard. This is usually a no-brainer, as I first indicated. What is so different with this phone's WiFi setup??
I appreciate your input!
DLCPhoto said:
I tried it before, but tried it again - with the Static IP set up on the Router (using the "DHCP Reservation" option in the Router's program), and the Connection Settings on the GS4 for this SSID set to DHCP, all advanced settings at their default, it behaves the same way: Shows Acquiring IP, tries it twice, then shows the message I quoted above.
The Router remains set at Automatic Configuration/DHCP overall, with DHCP Reservation used to create a Static IP for this phone's MAC address. If this isn't the proper way to do this, let me know.
And with the Phone Settings for this SSID's WiFi set to Static IP, and the info entered as above, it quickly connects, but doesn't gain internet access.
It shouldn't be this hard. This is usually a no-brainer, as I first indicated. What is so different with this phone's WiFi setup??
I appreciate your input!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That sounds exactly right to me, and you're right that it shouldn't be that difficult. I've heard others report of miscellaneous routers that don't play nice with our phone. In this case, it's an AP, but that might still be the issue. I haven't personally experienced the problem, so hopefully someone else can chime in who has.
ttupa said:
That sounds exactly right to me, and you're right that it shouldn't be that difficult. I've heard others report of miscellaneous routers that don't play nice with our phone. In this case, it's an AP, but that might still be the issue. I haven't personally experienced the problem, so hopefully someone else can chime in who has.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does anybody else have any ideas here?
I have also posted on Netgear and Verizon's forums, but am not expecting too much from either of these. I'm putting my money on the expertise here at XDA!
WMM is listed under the advanced settings of your router, it's not phone based but in your router. Disable it and return your other settings to normal and it should fix your problem.
Eric214 said:
WMM is listed under the advanced settings of your router, it's not phone based but in your router. Disable it and return your other settings to normal and it should fix your problem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll have another look in the morning but earlier today I looked through every page of settings and didn't see anything that looked or sounded like this.
What section or function might you expect it to be found? What else might it be called?
Thanks.
Advanced settings in your router.
Basically, the 802.11n spec requires devices to support 802.11e (Quality of Service [QoS] enhancements for wireless LAN) in order to use HT (High Throughput) link rates, i.e. higher than 54 Mbps. (WMM is a subset of 802.11e that was created by the Wi-Fi Alliance as a stop-gap measure while 802.11e made its way slowly through the IEEE review process.)
The point is this is an issue for the GS4 as it's either firmware related or a Samsung issue they didn't realize they caused. Point being, if you have constant disconnects to your router, disabling WMM should make your connection "stick". At this point its what you may have to do until a firmware update for the router is released or Samsung releases an OTA update fix. Unless you're rolling 3+ devices at the same time streaming content you shouldn't have an issue running 54mbps. I stream full HD content to 2 devices at the same time with no lags or decompression issues at 54mbps.
As long as your phone has a static IP from the router there is no reason to set the DNS on the S4...the router does all the DNS routing for your devices. Hopefully that'll fix your DNS error issue.
Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk 2
OK - had another look at the Router settings, and found the WMM option in the QoS section. I somehow overlooked that yesterday. I'll try this out later today when I'm at home.
Eric214 - with respect to this WMM setting, I have a Panasonic SmartTV, and stream Netflix, Amazon Video, Vudu, etc. and can get the highest quality (1080p) through these. Is changing this setting going to impair throughput for this purpose?
chrishoyt2012 - after changing to Static IP, if I did nothing on the phone (that is, kept it at DHCP), it didn't fix the problem. I then selected Static IP on the phone, which necessitated inputting DNS. There were DNS server entries there by default, and these didn't work, so I manually changed them to my ISP's DNS that are used on my Desktop.
What should I be doing in this regard, other than what I have tried above?
Thanks!
Well, I disabled WMM Support, but nothing changed. It still failed to get an IP Address, same as I described in my original post.
No replies in the other forums either.
I'd really like to get this going - I'm also considering getting the S4, but this may cause some second thoughts...
I went into the Netgear Adapter's setup program, but couldn't fix the problem there either.
I tried different Channels, and a few other settings changes, but no joy.
There was a WMM setting there, but it was checked, and greyed out, so I couldn't try unchecking it even if I wanted to. I disabled WMM on the Router again, but this option remained unavailable on the Adapter's setup program.
I went into my Router, and deleted the IP address for the S4, to try and 'reset' it, but still no change. The S4 shows 'failed to acquire IP' every time.
Any other ideas?? I also tried my daughter's Razr HD, and it connected fine, just like the others. What is so different about the S4's WiFi connectivity??
Just switched from cable to VZ gigabit FIOS internet only. They require you to keep their router in the loop no matter what other devices you might add. Using Fios Router with wifi turned off, connected to Netgear Orbi with two satellites. Mumimo and Beamforming are off at the recommendations of several Fios/Orbi users. Connection is from Fios router lan to internet port on Orbi. I have two satellites because apartment is long and thin with many very thick walls.
LG V10 which works very well but because of location, has to get cell signal from another state across a river. Therefore I use it in wifi mode when at home. When in the middle of a phone call I often lose the call as I move close to another access point (or satellite for Orbi). Have tried SWIFI but it needs each access point to have a "different ID" and I'm not sure what they're referring to. Can't often hold connection. Also tried Wifi Switcher (Cloudie), Wifi Toggle and one or two others.
Suggestions for other apps to try, or other settings? I need to use the router because the cell tower is so far away and I'd really like not to have to stay in one place if possible. Thanks for any and all help.