Hi Ramy, Sieghard has already answered your first question about how you can check the speed of your internet connection by using the free Speedtest.net app from Ookla: • Speedtest.net Mobile Speed Test (free) by Ookla https://itunes.apple.com/app/speedtest.net-mobile-speed/id300704847?mt=8
The best app I've found for doing a network scan for devices that are on the same network as your iPhone (or iPod Touch or iPad) is iNet Pro by BananaGlue GmbH: • iNet Pro - Network scanner ($6.99) by BananaGlue GmbH https://itunes.apple.com/app/inet-pro-network-scanner/id305242949?mt=8 I've had this app for 3 years, and it's very accessible, as well as consistently being rated among the top apps in this category. There is an unlabeled button that takes you to the "About" screen. (I don't know why so many apps that have all the other buttons labeled have one "Info" button that is not labeled, but this is fairly common). This page has the information about the version number, and buttons to let you email the developers or visit their web site, but it also has an "About view help button large" button that lets you access complete help information about the app. Apart from this, in general just double tap on "Network Scanner", which is the first entry on the main iNet screen, to go to the "Network Scanner" screen. By default, this displays the results of your last scan. You can simply run a new scan by double tapping the "rescan button" in the bottom right corner of the screen. You'll get a list of the devices found in a scan of your current network. It will identify the devices by model for both Apple and Windows products (e.g. iPhone, iPad, HP printer, MacBook) along with the Gateway, and give the MAC addresses of the device and the IP addresses on the network. Double tapping on any entry will give you more detailed information. For example, you can tell whether a host is visible or hidden -- whether it replies to a ping. Although the first entry says "button", if you flick right you'll get the information "Hosts in scan" (and a number of devices), and how long ago the scan was run, which is the information associated with that button. I think the reason it can't go into a button label is that the time is dynamically updated with the screen refresh. Double tapping that button gives summary information on the number of hosts found in the network (duplicating the information on the previous page), and will also tell you the time of the earliest previous scan while connected to this network. I don't usually access this unlabeled. One more tip: you can mail the results of a scan, save a scan and assign it a name, access a history of recent scans (listed by date and time), and access your scan settings to extend the scan range (which I never do). These options can be accessed by double tapping the "Drop down menu button" in the top right corner, but they can also be accessed by double tapping the "Network Scanner" screen heading, at the top center, which is also announced as a button. Double tapping the "Network Scanner" heading at the top center of the screen, that is also a button, is actually easier to do, because a four-finger tap in the top half of the screen to move to the first element on the screen will actually move your focus to this button -- and not to the "Back" button in the top left corner. I mean that if you drag your finger from the top left corner of the screen across the top of the screen, you'll hear "Back button" in the top left corner, "Network Scanner button" in the top center, and "Drop down menu button" in the top right corner, but if you do a "Read all" of the page, or a flick from the first element of the page, you'll hear the order announced as "Network Scanner button" (in the top center), "Back button" (top left corner), and "Drop down menu button" (top right corner). Because the screen refreshes when the menu drops down from the top center, after double tapping either the "Drop down menu button" or the "Network Scanner button" you want to touch the top center of the screen. I double tap the "Network Scanner" button, and then stroke down with my finger from the top center of the screen. Once you hear any of the drop down options announced, you can flick through the rest. These are: "Mail scan results", "Save scan", "Open scan" and "Scan settings". To dismiss the menu without choosing an action, flick left back to the "Drop down menu button" and double tap again. There is also a standard version of the iNet - Network Scanner app that is free (used to be $0.99), that you can try out first. I suspect that you will want the iNet Pro options of scanning results for your case, but I'll also give you the link to the standard version. You can update to the Pro version by in-app purchase: • iNet - Network scanner (free) by BananaGlue GmbH https://itunes.apple.com/app/inet-network-scanner/id340793353?mt=8 HTH. Cheers, Esther On May 11, 6:26 pm, "Ramy Moustafa" <moshtaqlealga...@gmail.com> wrote: > HI all: > > My internet speed is so bad in these days, and the company can not help me, > so is there any program on I phone that can tell me the exact speed, and if > anyone took my wireless password or something? I mean can I know the > machines that r with me in the same router > Thanks -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the "VIPhone" Google Group. To search the VIPhone public archive, visit http://www.mail-archive.com/viphone@googlegroups.com/. To post to this group, send email to viphone@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to viphone+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/viphone?hl=en. --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "VIPhone" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to viphone+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.