If any body fall in these kind problems. Nothing to worried, just follow this following steps. WiFi and Internet problems are hard to diagnose and usually rare, so this is my known list of possible causes /solutions seen here on the forums / experience
On for some time, then just kicks one off / won't connect
You have a DCHP "lease" which allows a machine to be on a certain amount of time with the router.
Check the time and date are correct in your computers System Preferences and that it's being updated with Apple's time servers.
Check with Airport Utility that there is a update that needs to be applied to the Airport's firmware.
Also run your Software Update fully for OS X too.
If that doesn't work, try this:
Go
to your System Preference > Network > Airport > Advanced >
Airport and use the "-" button to delete all your saved network
connections.
Reboot the machine, and manually connect in the upper right hand corner and when it ask "save to keychain" do that.
Another
way is to change your routers network name and/or security features,
connect manually in the upper right hand corner and when it asks to save
in KeyChain, do so.
Won't connect after wake from sleep, reboot, or coming back into range
If
you have a "hidden network" it doesn't broadcast a SSID, the Mac will
only ask if it's there upon a reboot or manual connection. Not upon a
wake up from sleep or if it gets out of range of the Wifi.
To stop this you need to unhide your network, hidden networks and MAC address filtering offer no protection against hackers.
- Go to System Preferences > Network.
- Click the Wi-Fi connection.
- Click the Advanced... button on the bottom right.
- Click the Wi-Fi tab.
- Under Preferred Networks, select your wireless network.
- Click the - (delete) button.
- Turn off your Wi-Fi connection.
- Turn it back on.
- Select and login to your wireless network. This will re-save your connection under Preferred Networks.
- Close your laptop and reopen it to test whether it worked.
New Mac or new location, won't connect
Newer
Mac's are not connecting to WEP encrypted as it's basically worthless,
WEP and WPA are both cracked only WPA2(AES) is secure.
Slow network
Some
ISP's are testing IPv6 and may cause issues, turn it off in your System
Preferences > Network > Advanced > TCP / IP
Unplug, plug in your router or router/modem combo to reset it
Sometimes it's not your fault, it's the ISP having troubles, a loose connection, pulled wire outside or down the block, etc.
Bypass your router, connect directly to modem
Using
a Ethernet cable, connect the Mac directly to the modem, power it
on/off to get a new connection to the ISP and this way one can determine
if the router is at fault or it's something further up the line.
Apple has some troubleshooting steps here too.
Secure your WIFI and privacy
Look at your Mac as a possible source of the problem
Sometimes
the Mac is the problem due to corrupt caches (#12 OynX routine), a
corrupt preference file (#12 OnyX > Verify > Preferences)
or it's the browser itself, try another and/or log into a new/anohter account to test.
Beware of those here recommending alternate DNS providers as a blanket solution
There are a group of regulars here, some of even high amount of points, that are shilling for OpenDNS or even GoogleDNS
They
may provide IP addresses like 208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220 or
8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 to enter into your Network Preferences > DNS
settings as a cure all for you without discussing fully if it will
resolve your issue or inquire about your Internet activity.
OpenDNS,
GoogleDNS and others is a alternate Domain Name Server provider than
the default one used by your Internet Service Provider when you set up
your Mac or network
What
this does is resolves domain names like www.apple.com into a IP address
or number like 123.55.678.12 (not real) so your computer can connect to
the site as that's how computers work.
You want to connect to Apple and the DNS provides the current IP address so your computer can connect.
It
is done this way so Apple (and other sites) can change servers, IP's or
locations and use the same name, much like a business keeps it's name
but changes it's location.
Some
are recommending alternate DNS as a solution to your problem when
that's not in a lot of cases exactly what's causing your problems and in
fact may bring more problems.
Sure
ISP's DNS can have issues, so can OpenDNS or GoogleDNS. If you switch
to alternate DNS you could have more long term problems than the short
ones you possibly won't even resolve by doing so. Your ISP DNS is having
issues and will be resolved shortly if you just wait some time.
OpenDNS
does provide more protection against hostile web sites by default,
blocking those sites from being accessed by your computer, with more
(paid) content filtering as a paid log in option. Some see it as a
benefit, but it can come at a painful cost.
Depending
upon your location, using a alternate DNS can make your downloads much
slower than before, especially Akamai/ISP based content which Apple uses
a lot of, like for iTunes content and Software Updates, reinstalls of
OS X 10.7/10.8+ for examples. This is because Akamai downloads goes by
your DNS server location (not your actual location) to send the content
from the closest ISP servers.
So using a alternate DNS can have a drastic effect on those who DNS server is located far away from the ISP server.
For
instance it was discovered one of our top top regulars was experiencing
problems with slow downloads, turned out he lived in Boston and the
closest OpenDNS server was in NYC.
So
when he went to download something, it always took a lot of time or had
glitches, it's because his downloads were coming from NYC Akamai
servers and when they were overloaded he was downloading from Chicago!
Soon as he switched his DNS settings back to his ISP's, his downloads speeds went back to normal.
Now
if your ISP download server location is in say Miami for instance, and
it also has a OpenDNS or GoogleDNS server, then there is no problem
using a alternate DNS provider other than the fact that either one
having problems will cause problems for you.
If you don't know what your doing, please leave the DNS settings alone.
If you don't do a whole lot of large content downloads,
then you can certainly try a alternate DNS that has a server removed
from your ISP's location, however the alternate DNS recommended to you
may NOT be the fastest or the most stable it's all relative to your
location.
You can use the free NameBench
from Google to determine what is the fastest DNS. Enable the local DNS
checks too, you might find out your local ISP DNS is indeed the best
solution for your needs.
However
give your ISP a fair shake, test a few times when they are not having
issues so you can get a more accurate reading of their results.
You can certainly use a alternate DNS in the short term to troubleshoot your issue, if it's a ISP DNS issue or not.
Note
that DNS settings need to be set on your router for all devices to use
and on your computer if it's a portable model to use at other Internet
locations.
Also
it's wise to review the privacy policy of alternate DNS providers, we
all know Google records everything we do and sells the information,
however your ISP with their DNS may be doing a better job of protecting
your privacy online as your a paying customer, as with Google it's a
free service that has a catch.