✓ Accepted Answer
The first thing I always try when my wifi is playing up is to completely forget the network on my device and reconnect from scratch. Go to wifi settings, tap the network name, select "Forget", then reconnect with the password. Simple but surprisingly effective.
For laptops specifically, outdated network drivers are a very common cause. On Windows right-click the Start menu, open Device Manager, expand Network Adapters, right-click your wifi adapter and select Update driver. Restart after.
Another thing worth checking: is your device's date and time correct? Some routers will reject connections from devices with wildly incorrect timestamps due to security certificate issues. Sounds odd but it happens.
Finally check if your ISP is having an outage in your area. Visit their website from mobile data and look for service status updates. Sometimes the problem has nothing to do with your device at all.
by tylertaylor
To set up a VPN properly, first decide between a free and paid service. Free VPNs often sell your data, which defeats the whole purpose. Reputable paid options include NordVPN, ExpressVPN, and ProtonVPN. ProtonVPN has a genuinely good free tier.
Once you've chosen a provider, download their app for your device. Most services support Windows, Mac, iOS and Android. Open the app, log in, and connect to a server. For best speeds pick a server geographically close to you. For bypassing regional restrictions pick a server in the target country.
For privacy, make sure the VPN has a kill switch feature — this cuts your internet if the VPN drops, preventing your real IP from leaking. Also check that they have a no-logs policy verified by independent audit.
On mobile, be aware VPNs can drain your battery. Only enable it when you need it, particularly on public wifi where it's most important.
by leilahassan4622
· 5 upvotes