Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Troubleshoot and secure wireless networks with channel optimization and diagnostics.
Troubleshoot and secure wireless networks with channel optimization and diagnostics.
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
2.4GHz penetrates walls better but congested โ neighbors' networks interfere 5GHz faster but shorter range โ may not reach all rooms Same SSID for both bands can cause issues โ device may stick to weak 5GHz instead of switching 6GHz (WiFi 6E) requires compatible devices โ falls back to 5GHz if unsupported
2.4GHz only has 3 non-overlapping channels (1, 6, 11) โ using others causes interference with neighbors "Auto" channel selection often picks poorly โ scan and set manually in congested areas 5GHz has more channels but DFS channels may pause for radar โ causes brief disconnects near airports Microwave ovens interfere with 2.4GHz channel 11 โ kitchen dead zones are real
WPA2-Personal minimum โ WEP and WPA crackable in minutes WPA3 preferred when all devices support โ falls back silently if mixed WPS is a backdoor โ disable it, PIN can be brute-forced regardless of password strength Hidden SSID doesn't improve security โ devices broadcast it anyway when searching MAC filtering trivially bypassed โ MACs visible in air, easy to spoof
"Connected" doesn't mean good signal โ check RSSI, below -70dBm is poor WiFi speed is shared medium โ many devices = less bandwidth each Advertised speeds are theoretical max โ real throughput is 50-70% at best Old devices slow entire network on 2.4GHz โ legacy rates affect everyone USB 3.0 devices interfere with 2.4GHz โ especially external drives near router
DHCP lease expiring causes reconnect โ reduce lease time for troubleshooting, increase for stability Roaming between access points isn't seamless โ same SSID doesn't mean smooth handoff Power saving mode causes ping spikes โ disable on devices where latency matters Driver issues more common than hardware โ update or rollback WiFi drivers first
Ping router IP, not internet โ isolates WiFi from ISP issues Signal strength varies by location โ walk around while monitoring Channel scanner shows neighbor congestion โ choose least crowded Packet loss under 1% is acceptable โ higher indicates interference or range issues
Center of coverage area, not corner of house โ signals radiate outward Elevated position improves coverage โ floor level gets blocked by furniture Away from metal objects and aquariums โ water and metal block signals Router antennas perpendicular to each other โ covers horizontal and vertical planes
Isolates untrusted devices from main network โ IoT devices can't reach your computers Separate password allows sharing without exposing main credentials Bandwidth limiting available on most routers โ prevent guests from saturating connection Captive portal unnecessary for home โ just use WPA2 with password
Extenders halve bandwidth โ repeating uses same channel for backhaul Mesh systems with dedicated backhaul avoid this โ wired backhaul even better Single router often enough โ try repositioning before buying mesh Adding access points to wrong locations creates more problems โ coverage overlap causes roaming issues
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