Originally Posted by phillychuck
After reaing this thread and the Apple forum on the Wifi issues, I think we're looking at two problems. One is a weird DNS problem that can be solved by manually inputting DNS server IPs, and is characterized by the phone showing network signal but not being able to access the internet.
The second problem appears to be the one I have, and I think tinman does, too, where the iphone loses signal after connecting. I don't think that problem has anything to do with the DNS server, I think its purely a local network issue, which appears to be solvable by replacing the router (something I don't want to do). There's got to be another way...
I sure hope so.
As an update WiFi seems to work acceptably around my house now. My iPhone doesn't match the range on my newer laptop, but it's very close to the one that is a few years old (both are 802.11g). I would probably not have not said anything about WiFi range problems had I not had the AP issues.
Also don't think my iPhone is defective from a hardware standpoint. The range I'm getting now seems inline with a power-conscious small device--a device without much room for an antenna. Still, I might be heading into Vegas anyway this weekend so if I do I'll compare to the demo iPhones at the Apple store. Would hate to find out later, after my return period is up, that my range is indeed sub-par.
For sure I can say I have experienced two different issues as far as WiFi is concerned: the first was related to the DNS IP address obtained via DHCP, a router issue for lack of a better term (i.e., not a wireless link problem per se: would probably happen even if the iPhone had an Ethernet jack). This issue can of course be worked around by using static IPs.
The second issue was with the AP itself. No matter what I did it did not play well with my iPhone. Symptoms in my case included extremely poor range, the inability to actually use the AP when it did show as in range, and the failure of EDGE automatically kicking in. Switching to a different AP seemed to solve this. Once I did lose signal in my house, rather far from the AP, but I hardly noticed it the transition to EDGE was so smooth. I was reading this forum actually, and happened to notice it loading a little slower than usual (though this Website seems to do OK as far as EDGE goes). Think it would have picked up WiFi again on its own, but I forced it by going into settings. Bingo, it was back to WiFi (the other AP would error out when trying to reconnect--until I was within 15 feet of it).
So, assuming my hardware is indeed typical, it would seem like the issues are software related. I hope this is addressed quickly as I wouldn't want to run into a public AP that is problematic. I could get around the DNS issue on my end, but if it's the range issue I don't anyone'll replace APs just for my iPhone.
BTW: I use WPA for WiFi security and never experienced any trouble there. That actually went rather smooth on both APs.
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Mike