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|    alt.comp.os.windows-10    |    Steaming pile of horseshit Windows 10    |    197,590 messages    |
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|    Message 196,243 of 197,590    |
|    knuttle to rbowman    |
|    Re: How to show ALL nearby Wi-Fi AP's BS    |
|    14 Dec 25 19:54:31    |
      XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-11, alt.comp.microsoft.windows       From: keith_nuttle@yahoo.com              On 12/14/2025 2:41 PM, rbowman wrote:       > On Sun, 14 Dec 2025 10:50:07 -0700, Marian wrote:       >       >> However, I agree with you that another operating system's Wi-Fi adapter       >> drivers might report the full scan instead of just what's lately been       >> cached.       >       > I'm seeing some variability.       >       > nmcli device wifi rescan       > nmcli device wifi list       >       > on three different machines give different lists. The most complete is the       > Lenovo laptop. Different chip sets and locations.       >       > The equivalent 'netsh wlan show networks' on the Windows laptop shows 7.       > The ones with the signal strength below 40 come and go. netsh doesn't show       > signal strength or the BSSID. I don't know if there are additional flags       > for that or to do a rescan.e       >       Have you consider interference? A car is in the way one minute not the       next. IS there any relationship between the presence or disappearance       of a station and signal strength? i.e. the ones appearing and       disappearing are weak station.              I have seen similar things on my own computer but assigned it to the       variance of the signal transmission through the local environment and       the change micro weather. Some one turns on a motor, a TV, Microwave, etc              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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