Articles Tagged With MetaGeek
Amped Wireless Teams With MetaGeek For Better Wi-Fi Tools
Amped Wireless has partnered with MetaGeek to bundle MetaGeek's free Wi-Fi analyzer tools.
Interop 2012 Las Vegas Report
A brief report on what I discovered at Interop 2012.
MetaGeek Takes Wireless Packet Analysis Visual
MetaGeek's wireless visual packet analysis product has exited beta.
MetaGeek Releases Updated inSSIDer
MetaGeek has released an updated version of its free Wi-Fi Scanner
MetaGeek Adds 900 MHz Spectrum Analyzer
MetaGeek has announced the general availability of a USB spectrum analyzer for the 900 MHz band, priced at $199.
MetaGeek Brings Back $99 Wi-Fi Spectrum Analyzer
It looks like the recession may have spurred the originator of inexpensive Wi-Fi spectrum analysis to roll back its pricing for 2.4 GHz WLAN spectrum analysis.
Read more...MetaGeek previewing 5 GHz version of low-cost Wi-Fi Spectrum Analyzer
MetaGeek is demonstrating a pre-release version of its upcoming Wi-Spy 5x at Interop 2008 in Las Vegas.
Wi-Spy 5x is a USB-based spectrum analyzer covering 5.170 GHz to 5.815 GHz (compete coverage of 802.11a/n), with a resolution of 328 KHz. It can detect signals with amplitudes of -100 dBm to -15 dBm with a resolution of 0.5 dBm.
Pricing has not yet been set. The product is slated for release "in early summer".
Read more...MetaGeek Wi-Spy 2.4x Review: Better, but Bigger Bucks
Meta-Geek's breakthrough Wi-Fi spectrum analyzer gets better and more expensive, but is still a bargain.
Read more...
MetaGeek announces next-gen low cost Wi-Fi spectrum analyzer
MetaGeek today announced the next generation of its Wi-Spy 2.4GHz Wi-Fi spectrum analyzer.
Wi-Spy 2.4x has three times the frequency resolution, three times the amplitude resolution, and twice the amplitude range of the original Wi-Spy.
Read more...MetaGeek Wi-Spy 2.4 GHz Spectrum Analyzer
When we first heard about a 2.4GHz spectrum analyzer for $99 bucks, we thought it couldn't be real. But it turns out that MetaGeek's Wi-Spy works well enough that it will probably cut into sales of the higher-priced stuff. Read more...
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