Getting the Most Bars
Friday, September 5th, 2008I’ve got a few minutes before I have to be in my LEGL class, so I decided to sit here in Sanford Hall and write a long overdue post on the TiF blog. I buy my Sprite, open up my laptop, and wait for that sweet, free, on-campus wireless to fill up my AirPort bars. Much to my dismay, only the tiny little period at the bottom of the arc is filled, and that’s when I remembered that the wireless signal in Sanford Hall is lacking to say the least.
I figured I would at least get decent wireless sitting in a designated sitting area, so I decided to do a little “snooping.” With so many wireless access points on campus, my computer doesn’t always seem to automatically choose the best one, so I have to do a little work myself. I use a program called KisMAC for all of my scanning. It has a lot of features, but really the only one I use is scan and then join the network with the best average strength.
Open up KisMAC and you’ll see an empty box ready to be filled with potential wireless connections. Click start scan and let it do it’s thing. It will immediately start sniffing around for all of the available wireless connections, secured or not.
After scanning you should get a nice little assortment of connections to choose from. Because all of these are nice and available to me as a student, I want to click “Average Strength” to sort them based on the strongest signal. I then just “Connect to Network” and voila! I’m using the best possible wireless connection available to me.





