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Wi-Fi Problems

Hello everyone who is reading:)

My story is simple i bought iMac with Snow Leopard on it and all was perfect.. until Lion came out:)

so i upgraded to that OS and Wi-Fi problems, incliuding dropped connections started... that was and still is the most annoying problem so far i ever had on the computer ever.. cheap 10 year old pc doesn't even have that problem.. and YES it is OS fault, i was thinking Yosemite HELPS but it doesn't i tried many things and still cant make it work, on Mac OS Lion halped getting v3.2 Atheros Wi-Fi drivers from Snow Leopard, to use on Lion (v3.2, compared to v4.0 that shipped with Lion) but that doesn't work with Yosemite so what do i do ? should i downgrade back to Snow Leopard what is old OS.. or just switch to a PC cuz im really getting tired of this.....

Maybe someone know a solusion i didn't try yet? or how i could get all network drivers from Snow Leopard to use on Yosemite?

iMac, OS X Yosemite (10.10.2)

Posted on Feb 26, 2015 11:48 AM

Reply
3 replies

Feb 26, 2015 12:01 PM in response to Armaniqio

Please test after taking each of the following steps that you haven't already tried. Stop when the problem is resolved. Back up all data before making any changes.

Step 1

Take the applicable steps in this support article. The Wireless Diagnostics program generates a large file of information about your system, which would be used by Apple Engineering in case of a support incident. Don't post the contents here.

Be sure to test on more than one Wi-Fi network, if at all possible. A desktop computer can be tested with a mobile hotspot, such as the hotspot created by a cell phone. If the problem only exists on one network, then the access point of that network should be the focus of your attention, not the computer.

Step 2

Disconnect all USB 3 devices. If you don't know which are USB 3, disconnect all USB devices except keyboard and mouse.

Step 3

If you're not using a wireless keyboard or trackpad, disable Bluetooth by selecting Turn Bluetooth Off from the menu with the Bluetooth icon. If you don't have that menu, open the Bluetooth preference pane in System Preferences and check the box marked Show Bluetooth in menu bar. Test. If you find that Wi-Fi works better with Bluetooth disabled, you should use the 5 GHz Wi-Fi band. Your router may not support it; in that case, you need a new router.

Step 4

Open the Energy Saver pane in System Preferences and unlock the settings, if necessary. Select the Power Adapter tab, if there is one. Uncheck the box marked

Wake for Wi-Fi network access

if it's checked.

Step 5

Open the Network pane in System Preferences and make a note of your settings in the Wi-Fi service. It may be helpful to take screenshots of the various tabs in the preference pane. If the preference pane is locked, unlock it by clicking the padlock icon and entering your administrator password. Delete Wi-Fi from the service list on the left by selecting it and clicking the minus-sign button at the bottom. Then recreate the service by clicking the plus-sign button and following the prompts.

Step 6

In the Wi-Fi settings, select

Advanced... TCP/IP Configure IPv6: Link-local only

Click OK and then Apply.

Step 7

Reset the System Management Controller.

Step 8

Reset the PRAM.

Step 9

Launch the Keychain Access application. Search for and delete all AirPort network password items that refer to the network. Make a note of the password first. Turn Wi-Fi off and then back on. You'll be prompted for the password when you reconnect. Save it in the keychain.

Step 10

Make a "Genius" appointment at an Apple Store, or go to another authorized service center.

Wi-Fi Problems

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