OSX Yosemite Wifi issues

Hi there,


I upgraded my Macbook Pro Retina 15" (mid 2014 revision) to OS X Yosemite last night and am now having issues when using my home WiFi connection. Whilst it connects to either the 5Ghz or 2.4Ghz network, it is basically unusable. Web pages take minutes to load (if they even load at all), dropbox doesn't sync because it can't get a connection and even trying to get to the router config page is extremely slow and hit/miss.


Tethering to my iPhone seems to work ok, as does using my home network via wired ethernet.


Are any others having problems with Yosemite? Wifi was working fine on Mavericks.


Tom

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Yosemite (10.10)

Posted on Oct 17, 2014 12:37 AM

Reply
3,443 replies

Nov 13, 2014 7:39 AM in response to WarwickRob

II've tried a few of the solutions suggested on this thread and some have produced short term fixes but the problem has always resumed. The one thing I did that has helped more than anything else is rearranging all the electrical items in the same room as my iMac. A hifi speaker in particular seemed to have been screwing with the iMacs ability to communicate with other devices and simply moving that a foot further away has worked wonders. Its presence wasn't a problem with Mavericks though so why it is with Yosemite is a mystery. I'm still getting occasional drop outs so I'm still not happy but I'm happier than I was.

Nov 13, 2014 9:29 AM in response to KathrynG

I'm sorry, I do feel your pain. I'm going to similar experiences with this unfortunate Yosemite update. Unfortunately Apple doesn't read our massages on this forum. Sending massages or submitting complains will not help much. Traditionally Apple is unresponsive to customers hardship. All we have left at this point is hope that this problem will get their attention and will be fixed soon. Please do not attempt any fixes because everything suggested on this forum doesn't work or is just a temporary solution.

Nov 13, 2014 9:57 AM in response to Warszawa

I don't think anybody on here knows exactly what is causing the problem. The only reason I posted the article from Huffington Post was to show that slowly very slowly the problems are appearing in the press and that might give some hope to those on here who are really suffering and I am thinking in particular of KathrynG. The only thing that will accelerate Apple into fixing what is wrong is negative publicity and plenty of people were complaining at the bottom of the Huff article, If it was the wrong thread on which to post the piece then so be it.

Nov 13, 2014 1:42 PM in response to JPSilver

You have purchased two 5k 27" i-Macs with originally installed Yosemite and experiencing unstable or dropping off WiFi on both units? Man, you have dropped over 5G on two brand new computers and having this kind of an issue? Well, it tells me how much Apple is slipping under now days. It is a serious issue for Apple and they acting like having all the time in the world to play with it. Under Steve Jobs they would have to work around the clock until the issue is fixed and those responsible for creating a such error fired. Apple programmers are making tons of money to make this error or mistake.

Nov 13, 2014 1:47 PM in response to JPSilver

JPSilver wrote:


I have a two new iMac 5Ks with Yosemite pre-installed. Both have intermittent WiFi connection drops, so in my case it is not an upgrade issue.


Its just a nuisance at this point. I hope the OSX 10.10.1 is ready for release soon

Are those drops wifi connection drops or network drops.... If they are wifi drops, that means that your WLAN disappears and is not seen in the wifi menu drop down. I take you refer to url-resovle. That when you enter a url into i.e safari that nothing happens.


Either way, did you reset the WLAN-Creator (i.e. Airport Extreme) to factory defaults and re-configure the device from scratch using Yosemite?

If not, please try that. I did it about 4 days ago and have had no issue since.


IHTH

Nov 13, 2014 2:00 PM in response to Warszawa

Warszawa wrote:


Under Steve Jobs they would have to work around the clock until the issue is fixed and those responsible for creating a such error fired.

1) What makes you think that they do not work around the clock to fix this.

2) Under Steve Jobs (Great Man) mobile.me was released. It lastet several years and was never fully working. iCloud fixed (relieved) it. In Jobs's own words "mobile.me was not our finest hour". To think this problem would/could not have happened under Jobs is a waste of good thoughts. Mobile.me's error-Magnitude greatly surpasses this here tiny Network issue..

3) I understand that it is a nuisance for you. But does fuelling this fire every day, really provide you with remedy. Try shifting your thoughts towards something more positive.

4) You have been provided with several temporary fixes, conjured up by voluntary people. Temporary means that they aint going to last long. But if repeated will work. And they do. In addition, I have given you a 2 hour total fix to your problems. Install Mavericks and spend the rest of the day surfing the web or do whatever you do without being mad. But you did not want to do that. Perhaps you should reconsider that option.


5) People who program software and computers are human beings such as yourself. They have feelings and blood run thru' their veins.

Don't think for minute that someone who is responsible for OS X networking and wifi is happy about a situation like this, after having spent months of writing it.

He/she wants this to work just as badly as you do.


6) Yosemite is a Free Upgrade that no one forced you to install !

Nov 13, 2014 2:48 PM in response to MortenJamesCarlsen

Is it possible to make your responses none personal? We are all to certain degree personally affected by it, however sill strangers to each other just trying to understand, share emotions ideas and possibly help. We are not getting any responses from Apple. A general acknowledgment from Apple in a brief statement would help to settle down some of frustrations.

Nov 13, 2014 3:45 PM in response to Warszawa

Warszawa wrote: Under Steve Jobs they would have to work around the clock until the issue is fixed and those responsible for creating a such error fired.


Nah, it was no different under Jobs. I bought two inbox in 2003 that had a problem with logic boards burning out in 2 months with serial repairs being necessary, this went on for years. Then in 2010 I bought a couple of Macbook Pro 2.8Ghz i7's with a graphic chipset that freezes the machine. It took Apple about three years to acknowledge the inherent flaws with both those machines. Apple are quite prepared to hang their loyal customer base out to dry when it suits them.

Nov 13, 2014 4:08 PM in response to MortenJamesCarlsen

Well put 🙂 .... I am sure the developers at Apple are not sleeping well over this one...... and it IS a free install..... and we (all) did agree to the fine print when we installed it....... I still this it is poor business practice to not issue a notice of any kind on the part of Apple. This will all be forgotten in a few months and on to another glitch in the works....

Nov 13, 2014 4:17 PM in response to Warszawa

Warszawa wrote:


Is it possible to make your responses none personal? We are all to certain degree personally affected by it, however sill strangers to each other just trying to understand, share emotions ideas and possibly help. We are not getting any responses from Apple. A general acknowledgment from Apple in a brief statement would help to settle down some of frustrations.

I have been friendly to you. Given you a fool-proof solution to your network issues.

Sorry about that.


You keep using every chance you get to point out that you want Apple to apologize or make statements. Statements can take on different forms.

Engineering of 10.10.01 BETA - asking testers to concentrate on WIFI - would be one example of a statement !


I personally prefer such a statement over an apology.

Nov 13, 2014 5:06 PM in response to howardabbotsford

At the moment we have four 2.7Ghz MacBook Pro i7 Retina's that are each freezing about three times a day since Yosemite. Along with the network issues, Bluetooth issues and the fact that I can't turn Notifications off I am not real happy with Yosemite. It could turn me off as a Mac user ( I have been using Mac's since 1984 and Apple II's before that )

Nov 13, 2014 5:11 PM in response to howardabbotsford

howardabbotsford wrote:


At the moment we have four 2.7Ghz MacBook Pro i7 Retina's that are each freezing about three times a day since Yosemite. Along with the network issues, Bluetooth issues and the fact that I can't turn Notifications off I am not real happy with Yosemite. It could turn me off as a Mac user ( I have been using Mac's since 1984 and Apple II's before that )

Hi - perhaps you can start a thread about the freezing issues. I am sure that if you describe the issues that someone can help in some way.

Give it a shot. And if you have already started one, throw in the link ;-)

Nov 13, 2014 6:08 PM in response to MortenJamesCarlsen

I'm not sure which is the fool-prof solution that you provided. I'm not comfortable in reverting my computer from Yosemite to Maverick. It is a little complex for me to perform without a wary. Beside that I have tried all of the solution suggested on this forum plus few from my own e-net research. Nothing works. The last solution I performed is a hard reset of my Air Port Extreme router. I really need my computer to be operational just like before the Yosemite "upgrade". I'm depending on it every day.

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OSX Yosemite Wifi issues

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