moxie.a...@posteo.net wrote:
> Maybe this helps
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Iwd#Manage_known_networks
>
> To list networks you have connected to previously:
>
> [iwd]# known-networks list
>
> To forget a known network:
>
> [iwd]# known-networks forget
This worked like a
On 23-09-07 22:44:58, Morten Bo Johansen wrote:
Aaron Liu wrote:
Maybe you could try forgetting the router's network name? Assuming that the
two show up as different entries in the network list.
Seems like a good idea. How do I do it? I use iwd (which I
should have mentioned the first time).
On 2023-09-07 at 22:44:58 +0200,
Morten Bo Johansen wrote:
> Aaron Liu wrote:
>
> > Maybe you could try forgetting the router's network name? Assuming that the
> > two show up as different entries in the network list.
>
> Seems like a good idea. How do I do it? I use iwd (which I
> should have
Aaron Liu wrote:
> Maybe you could try forgetting the router's network name? Assuming that the
> two show up as different entries in the network list.
Seems like a good idea. How do I do it? I use iwd (which I
should have mentioned the first time).
Thanks,
Morten
Maybe you could try forgetting the router's network name? Assuming that
the two show up as different entries in the network list.
On 2023/9/7 9:01, Morten Bo Johansen wrote:
Hi,
I have a wifi router and an extender/repeater. I connect to the
extender's station to get the best signal, but when
Hi,
I have a wifi router and an extender/repeater. I connect to the
extender's station to get the best signal, but when I close the
lid on my laptop and then open it again, wifi resumes with a
connection to my router's station, thereby losing about 30%
signal strength so I need to manually disconn