How can I connect to an Access Point by BSSID instead of ESSID in Windows 7?
Did you manage to solve this? In case it's helpful, I've found a partial solution.
The utility WirelessMon - http://www.passmark.com/products/wirelessmonitor.htm It allows you to override Windows wifi selection, and explicitly connect to an AP by MAC address.
I had the highly frustrating problem of needing to use a public hotspot network with a portal website, and every time my wifi roaming jumped AP, every ~5 minutes or so owing to two of them being very similar signal strength, I'd have to re-enter my login details.
The downsides of using WirelessMon are, it's only a 30-day trial, and it also tends to screw up the connection itself by constantly scanning in the background. The best solution I've found is to set its sampling rate to the maximum of 60 seconds, which helps enormously compared to the default of 3.
If anyone knows of a free app that does a similar job, please post about it!
Related videos on Youtube
Marcel Valdez Orozco
I am Marcel: father, husband, athlete, developer, and nerd. I have been passionate about being a chess tournament player, natural bodybuilder, hardcore gamer and poker player; but that is in the past. I am currently passionate about philosophy, software engineering, building products from the ground-up and holistic development programs. I am always a passionate husband, father, son, and brother. You can connect with me in linkedin.
Updated on September 18, 2022Comments
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco almost 2 years
Suppose there is a network with several Access Points, all with the same ESSID, but I always want to connect to an specific access point that has a certain BSSID (MAC address), is it possible to do this in Windows?
I tried making this type of connection by using the Native Wifi API, but the Connect function only lets you specify the ESSID not BSSID.
Has anyone found a way to connect to an AP, by specifying its BSSID in Windows?
-
Ramhound over 11 yearsWhy don't you just avoid connecting to the other access points and mark the access point you do want to connect to as a prefeered connection.
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco over 11 yearsI'd like to do that, but the Windows Wireless Network Configuration only lets you mark access points by ESSID (Network Name), I can't tell it to select an AP by BSSID (AP Mac Address).
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco over 11 yearsSeveral Access Points (with different BSSID[MAC Address]) near me have the same ESSID(Network Name), since they are part of the same network.
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco over 11 yearsFor some stupid reason, windows sometimes disconnects from the AP with the best Signal and instead connects to one with a worse signal, and my connection gets mega super slow.
-
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco over 11 yearsHaven't tried it, but I will nice answer. +1
-
Marcel Valdez Orozco almost 11 yearsThis worked, but since it is not a free tool, I am afraid I cannot accept it as the solution.
-
qasdfdsaq almost 9 years@MarcelValdezOrozco: There is no "the" solution. Windows does not have a capability so you have to use a third party tool. Some wireless cards come with a free one but they are specific to that card and there is no information about the card in the question anyway.
-
Admin about 2 years44$ LOL LOL LOL LOL