Posts

Showing posts with the label iOS

Five Minutes to Get RSSI on Your iPhone's (or iPad's) Home Screen

Image
Via my YouTube page : *** If you like my blog, you can support it by shopping through my  Amazon  link.  You can also donate via Paypal below, or by sending Bitcoin to  1N8m1o9phSkFXpa9VUrMVHx4LJWfratseU Twitter:  @Ben_SniffWiFi ben at sniffwifi dot com

An Android Change for the Better (Maybe)

Image
Chatty smartphones have been an issue for years.  Whether you're concerned with security or performance  (or both), the amount of Probing being done by unconnected iPhones, Galaxies and the like has been worrisome.   Today, things have changed.  Smartphones don't Probe as much.  This is probably for the better, but there could be a catch. I'm an Apple guy.  Even when I was using PCs in college (things were different back in the 90's , I tell ya), it was always because they were free.  Once I finally had to buy a computer, I went straight to the very first iBook in 2001.  I own an iPod, iPad, iPhone and MacBook Air.  My next computing purchase will probably be an iMac (to better record those promised-but-not-yet-delivered online training videos on WiFi that I touted six months ago).  So, I like the company.  And I like bashing its competitors sometimes.  (Not my most magnanimous trait, but nobody's perfect.) I liked pointing out that Google's Android ope

iPhone 5 Probes the Right Way, Too

Image
Quiet when standing still; active when moving.  That is the way that WiFi devices should treat Probe Requests.  Android devices (at least, Android devices that act like yours truly's Samsung Galaxy Tab 2) probe the right way .  After doing a quick test on the iPhone 5, it appears that Apple has their devices probe based on movement as well. Apple iOS devices have a terrible reputation in some WiFi circles.  The author has heard complaints about mobility, stickiness, throughput capabilities and just about anything else under the sun.  Heck, just today an article was published decrying the throughput ( WHO CARES? ) limitations of of the new MacBook Air (not iOS, but still Apple) was viral'd around the web. To check to see if the iPhone 5 matches the probing behavior of an Andoid device, I associated the iPhone to the office network on channel 36/+1 and started a capture on channel 44/+1.  Then I got up from my chair and started walking around while continuing to use the iPho

That Android is Quite the Prober

No bold type introducing today's post, as I'm going to keep things short. I was doing some work last week looking at Android devices (specifically, a Samsung Galaxy Tab 2) and I noticed some very heavy probing behavior.  We were checking out the device's behavior when it moves from AP to AP, so I set a capture for the target second AP.  I did the test (things went fine, but the WiFi Analyzer app in particular seems to really make Android devices stick to their currently associated BSS) and looked at the capture. Seeing a ton of Probe Requests from the Tablet was expected.  What wasn't expected was the Android tablet probing even while associated to the first AP.  Even when the received signal was strong (in the -50 to -63 dBm range), the Android was going off channel to probe and probe excessively. At this point I'm still trying to figure out if physical motion or an app (or lack thereof) caused the probing.  One thing I am pretty confident in saying already