Stumbler

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  • Dear Aunt TUAW: Help me find a WiFi stumbler app for Lion

    by 
    Erica Sadun
    Erica Sadun
    02.02.2012

    Dear Aunt TUAW, I'm a Mac IT professional, and often find myself configuring, troubleshooting, and optimizing wireless networks. In the past I used AP Grapher to graph wireless strength and find competing Wi-Fi networks as I walk around my clients' offices. This allows me to pick the best channel to use with the least competition, troubleshoot wireless strength, and find the optimal location for my hardware. In Lion, AP Grapher has gone from unstable to unusable. I've found that it hasn't been updated since 2007. I have tested other Mac stumbler applications, but have yet to find one that works with Lion. Most crash on launch and others don't reliably detect wireless networks. Can you recommend a Mac application for graphing my wireless strength and recording info about competing wireless networks? Thanks! Your loving nephew, Aaron Dear Aaron, Auntie asked around and it looks like iStumbler will be your best bet. Note that it's currently at its 100 GM Candidate 3 beta stage of development. Another suggestion is the open source KisMAC. You might also want to try out the Wi-Fi diagnostics app that's bundled with Lion's Core Services. Hugs, Auntie T. Special thanks to Fraser Hess, Adrian Burgess, Alex Patsay, Harris Kleyman, Alex Sebenski and Julian Kussman.

  • Widget Watch: JiWire

    by 
    Jay Savage
    Jay Savage
    08.11.2005

    Today's featured widget over at Apple is one of the most useful I've seen so far: a JiWire widget. It's the best of both worlds when it comes to wireless widgets: part stumbler, part search engine tool for JiWire's database of wireless hotspots. The stumbler has a completely automated interface to Airport: clicking the link in the widget connects you to any network you can see. In fact, the stumbler seems to be just a wrapper for AirPort's built-in functionality, but it does provide some extras that you can't see in the Airport menubar dropdown, like which networks are open and which have encryption enabled. The database lookup is nifty, too. Results are returned in the widget; clicking on them opens the JiWire detail page for that hotspot in Safari. Who knew the McDonald's around the corner has an AT&T hotspot?