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Mavericks: Wifi takes a while to connect after sleep

Not sure if this question has been asked, but I'm finding this rather annoying. I just upgraded from Snow Leopard and there was a feature where with one simple touch on the trackpad, you can wake your Mac up after the screen goes to sleep after a period of inactivity. I understand that this feature is no longer available after the Lion and Mountain Lion upgrades. With Mavericks, after my Macbook goes to sleep, I push a key and it wakes up, but the wifi takes a while to reconnect, however with Snow Leopard, when I woke up my macbook, the wifi didn't have to reconnect. Is anyone else having this problem? Is this a bug? I hope Apple can come up for a fix for this, because aside from the fact that I can no longer use Pro Tools 9, I'm having free "buyer's remorse" for upgrading.

MacBook Pro (13-inch Early 2011), OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Oct 25, 2013 3:48 PM

Reply
91 replies

Feb 7, 2014 9:37 AM in response to Nancy Hayes Neill

I'm going to go ahead and make a Time machine backup, and see if I can't roll this thing back to mt. Lion. I've been trying to decide if it's worth the time and the data to download it again. Does anybody know if there's a way to get mountain lion on disk and/or a way I can roll back to mountain lion without uninstalling all my programs?


Comcast only allows 300 gb/month and if I get into reinstalling everything I'm sure to go over this month. If anyone knows a way to backup adobe cc apps and Logic Pro and all it's instruments to an external disk too, that would be good, so I don't have to spend a big chunk of cap downloading those too.

Feb 7, 2014 5:39 PM in response to sewercat

I have the exact same problem as everyone else but as I previously reported, the problem does NOT occur when I am on an apple network with a router that has the new A/C technology. As soon as I take my computer to a network that is using a b/n router, the problem comes right back.


I would like to know why this is, and I am curious if anyone else experiences the same thing in which the problem is dependent on the type of router technology.


I'm also wondering if this just isn't another one of Apple's slighted attemps to force new technology on their customers.

Feb 18, 2014 9:02 AM in response to Whargarblicus

Okay, I'm reporting back after visiting the Apple store: It works on their wifi. It doesn't work anywhere else; not the router at work, not the one at home. It appears between their Genius bars and their internal product testing environments, Apple's support systems aren't structured to notice this problem exists and have no apparent means to verify it within the Apple fishbowl. When referencing these forums, the tech stated that they couldn't use any of this as it's not, again, official Apple communication. It's an inherent flaw of their self-referencial ecosystem that means this will probably end up a class action item. Some outside pressure will have to be necessary to bring this issue to light. I'll be contacting my state attorney general later in the week.

Feb 18, 2014 11:54 AM in response to Whargarblicus

Whar,

I think I posted about that before but it may have been a different forum on the same issue. Anyway, I noticed the exact same thing you described with the problem not happening at the Apple store on their network. I needed a new router anyway so I bought an Apple Air Port Extreme. That solved the problem for me as I no longer experience the wifi problem on the AirPort Extreme router, but as soon as I turn my old router back on or go to someone's house or a different network, the problem returns. I think the issue is the router technology. The new Air Port Extreme and probably whatever router they are using at Apple Store have the new AC technology (802.11ac). All the other routers where I experience the problem are still using N (802.11n). So I think in designing Mavericks to work with the latest and greatest wifi technology they missed something that makes it work on the older N technology. What I don't understand is how Bluetooth factors into it.

Feb 18, 2014 6:56 PM in response to chrismartinphd

I've been following this thread. I've had this problem for some months and I gather Apple has not responded to these problems and It sounds like a classic management decision not to support backward compatibility which means you can't expect your apple computer to work on older or other vendor network hardware.


I'm not about to replace a working wireless router for the sake of Apple management performance goals. I've talked to others about these problems and yep similar experiences. Don't expect your Apple to work after an OS upgrade. A good reason not to buy Apple ever again.

Mar 13, 2014 8:03 AM in response to Nancy Hayes Neill

im not going to read through all responses but this is clearly a mavericks bug. I had this problem right out the box with a new imac. i hoped the upgrade to 10.9.2 would resolve, but no, it did not.

Ive found that closing apps connected to internet before going into sleep resolves the problem. Its obviously the os. Ive had no trouble with my ipad and no trouble with the router. I'm on an airport. Typical apple not properly testing os properly for this kind of annoying crap.

Mar 22, 2014 7:51 AM in response to MinuNianda

Probably I've found the reason of this annoying problem and I've found a solution too (at least it worked for me).

Thanks to people of this thread that found that the wifi problem is connected to the bluetooth activation. They gave me the right idea that I followed to find the solution.

The problem is due to the "Order of services" in the Networking Preferences (sorry for my translation but my OS is in italian so I'm guessing how the option menu could be in english). If the DUN Bluetooth or PAN Bluetooth service is BEFORE the Wi-Fi service, after waking up your Mac, your Wi-Fi will reconnect very very slowly or will never reconnect automatically at all.

But if you change the order of your Networking Services and you put the Wi-Fi at the first place, your Wi-Fi will reconnect almost immediately (it worked for me!).

To change the Networking Service Order go to Preferences --> Network, press the Gear Wheel in the lower left of the window, choose the "Set Service Order..." option. A new window will appear with different kind of connections.

Drag your Wi-Fi connection to the top. Press OK, and then Apply.

Restart your Mac and verify by yourself if the Wi-Fi problem has been solved.

Mavericks: Wifi takes a while to connect after sleep

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