Here’s a great Law of Unintended Consequences: we were installing a new Wireless Access Point in the office today, which allowed us to relocate the existing AP to a location closer to our Company’s HR offices. To check the signal strength, my new network analyst pulls out his iPhone and brings up a Wi-Fi scanner that shows the SSID, MAC Address, Channel, and received strength of the Wi-Fi networks it can receive. I asked him what App he had that could do that on iOS and he tells me it’s Apple’s Airport Utility. Wha-wa-wa-What???
Turns out you go into the App settings for the Airport App in Settings and at the bottom is a toggle to enable Wi-Fi scanning. Who knew? There is also a caveat that this setting can increase energy use, which makes sense. Anyway, I try it out and sure enough, there are all the SSIDs we should be seeing, and our HR representative can now access the data she needs. A good day’s work.
So, I think, I want to try this at home, as I have always seen some odd Wi-Fi networks in our home, in addition to the Wi-Fi I set up. I fire this up on my iPad and bingo, there are some normal names, like “NETGEAR93”, but also some weird SSIDs like ”kenganinja”, “Starbase4”, “Section9”, to name a few. Here’s the weird thing: the Signal Strength is 0 dBm, not -xx dBm like my home Wi-Fi SSIDs, or even weaker numbers for some other networks. It reminded me of the old thriller, “The call is coming from inside your house!”
Since my Watch and iPhone were within a few feet, I tried putting them in Airplane mode, but I could still detect them. I finally powered down my watch and phone, and what do you know, no more phantom Wi-Fi SSIDs! I expect the Watch was innocent as I had seen weird SSIDs years before. When I powered up the iPhone, the SSIDs came back.
So, I appear to have something bizarre on my iPhone with the latest iOS that is creating bogus Wi-Fi networks, for what purpose I have no idea. Google hasn’t been any help, so I think my next step will be a Genius appointment this weekend.
Turns out you go into the App settings for the Airport App in Settings and at the bottom is a toggle to enable Wi-Fi scanning. Who knew? There is also a caveat that this setting can increase energy use, which makes sense. Anyway, I try it out and sure enough, there are all the SSIDs we should be seeing, and our HR representative can now access the data she needs. A good day’s work.
So, I think, I want to try this at home, as I have always seen some odd Wi-Fi networks in our home, in addition to the Wi-Fi I set up. I fire this up on my iPad and bingo, there are some normal names, like “NETGEAR93”, but also some weird SSIDs like ”kenganinja”, “Starbase4”, “Section9”, to name a few. Here’s the weird thing: the Signal Strength is 0 dBm, not -xx dBm like my home Wi-Fi SSIDs, or even weaker numbers for some other networks. It reminded me of the old thriller, “The call is coming from inside your house!”
Since my Watch and iPhone were within a few feet, I tried putting them in Airplane mode, but I could still detect them. I finally powered down my watch and phone, and what do you know, no more phantom Wi-Fi SSIDs! I expect the Watch was innocent as I had seen weird SSIDs years before. When I powered up the iPhone, the SSIDs came back.
So, I appear to have something bizarre on my iPhone with the latest iOS that is creating bogus Wi-Fi networks, for what purpose I have no idea. Google hasn’t been any help, so I think my next step will be a Genius appointment this weekend.