I just bought a new Lenovo Ideapad 5 pro 16ACH6 with windows 11. Immediately noticed that wi-fi speed was incredible slow. The network adapter is Qualcomm Atheros QCA61x4A. I run the speed test, it starts with 30 Mbps and slows down to 10 Mbps. On my other devices speed test comes out to 200Mbps from the same location.
Link speed : 866/866 (Mbps)
I tried to update drivers and the other solutions what I found on the forums, but the problem was not solved.
It's often something with the router. Try rebooting the router and if issue stays check by connecting to another network.
Related
I have recently noticed a modification on my Terminal session on my MacBook Pro depending on whether I am connected to the internet or not.
Not connected: to the internet
thomas#MacBook-Pro-de-Thomas
Connected to the internet
thomas#Henris-Air
I have absolutely not any idea about this being normal or not, but it feels like not.
I have a VPN installed (Hotspot Shield) but it's not activated at the moment.
Also I have Anaconda installed
Details of the mac
MacBook Pro (16 pouces, 2019)
Processeur 2,6 GHz Intel Core i7 6 cœurs
Memoire 32 Go 2667 MHz DDR4
Thank you for your help on the matter, I am
I am a Win10 Pro + Insider Preview (WSL2) user.
I don't know when it will start, but when I come back from sleep mode about a month ago, there is a problem that Windows time and Internet time (for example, computer and cell phone time) are not synchronized.
This does not happen on all computers, but only on the desktop. It is not in use or occurs in the same environment on the laptop.
The only difference in hardware is that the CPU is a Ryzen 5 2600 and there is a GPU (Nvidia GTX 760), but I am not sure what caused this.
The software is being developed from WSL2 to NodeJS, but the modules and settings are not much different from this laptop.
If you know how to solve the problem other than reinstalling the OS, please answer.
OS: Win10 Pro 2004 (OS build 19041.330)
CPU: Ryzen 5 2600
I am trying to use Windows 10 to set up a quick and easy hotspot. I am able to find and connect to the windows 10 hotspot without any issues but the speed is incredibly slow. When not connected to the hotspot I am getting 140 mbps down and 74 mbps up, but when connected to the hotspot I am getting around 1 mbps down and 300 kbps up.
I downloaded and installed the latest drivers for my wifi drivers and no matter what I do the speed will not reach anywhere near what it should be. I also tried it with another device and that device also had terrible speed so I don't think it is the device specifically, on top of the fact that it has decent speed when connected directly to the internal network.
Does anyone have any ideas why this might be happening and how to fix it?
I am developing on an ARM Mbed board which connects to my Windows laptop over USB. I've just moved to a new Dell laptop running Win 10 [from a Dell laptop running Win 7] and I find that the laptop resets my development board every 15 minutes.
There are two things that will cause the ARM Mbed board to reset:
powering down/up the USB connection
sending "break" via the USB serial driver.
When the reset occurs there is nothing of note in the Windows event logs. I have all of the "allow Windows to power me down" boxes unticked on the USB hubs in System devices and in the Control Panel power management options.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how I (a) debug what's going on or (b) fix/workaround the problem? I've not yet tried connecting via a powered USB hub, will do that next...
I had the same issue using a FRDM-K64F running mBed and communicating over a USB COM port to a Windows 7 Dell machine. The communication would sometimes drop out. As #Rob suggested, uninstalling the Dell Support Assist Agent completely fixed the issue.
Just adding this answer as it was very difficult to find any information using google.
Another note in support of this solution for google...
I have a Dell 5480 running Windows 10, and started using from ST Nucleo boards on it. I've used the exact same boards at work, with no problems. Every 15minutes or so the board was reset.
I tried disabling the Dell Support Assist services but this did not seem to fix the problem.
Removing the programs did make the Nucleo work.
I'm currently working on 2 applications (one on iOS and the other on Mac) that are communicating using Bluetooth Low Energy (Bluetooth 4.0).
I develop these applications using CoreBluetooth on iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite.
I'm facing the following issue :
On my Mac, if the Wifi is turned OFF or if it is connected to a 5 Ghz wifi network, I have a stable Bluetooth connection between the iPhone and the Mac. No problem.
If my Mac is connected to a 2.4 Ghz Wifi network and if I have at least one Bluetooth device connected like a keyboard, trackpad, mouse... (using Classic Bluetooth), I have a stable Bluetooth connection between the iPhone and the Mac. No problem.
If my Mac is connected to a 2.4 Ghz Wifi network, the Bluetooth connection becomes unstable : the connection is stopped almost every 10 seconds and in Xcode I get an error message telling that the connection had an unexpected timeout.
I spent days on the Internet to try to figure out what I can do.
The best answer I found was this answer : CoreBluetooth and Wifi interference
But it means that I have to tell to my app's users to run this script and reboot their computer which is not for me a viable solution for production.
I also heard something about dealing with classical bluetooth peripherals (maybe to simulate one) or Wifi interfaces, but I found no solutions involving these kinds of manipulations.
Does anyone have an idea about something that I can do ? A workaround about the OSX Bluetooth management, the Wifi interfaces ?
I really need help about this issue.
Thank you very much in advance for your help.