PCIe port supporting Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity
PCIe port supporting Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity
Your CPU operates at 4 GHz with a base clock of 3.6 GHz, so it’s not running at full capacity. Reducing the clock speed might help if you want to lower power usage without affecting performance too much. For your Wi-Fi setup, going wired instead of using a extender is usually more stable and efficient.
Just go wired if you can, that eliminates any wireless interference. Changing the cpu settings won't do anything. What I mean is that that the USB driver is driven by the CPU, so the higher utilization the USB Wifi part, the higher the CPU load is, and the higher the power is consumed by the WiFi USB device. So many devices will just drop out if there is a lot of activity (eg P2P patching tools like steam and mmorpg's.) But it's also easily attributed to the WiFi access point dropping out too, as the cpu's in the AP's are often pretty weak. So if it's just you dropping out, it's your computer, but if everything drops out, it's the Wifi AP/Modem.
Right okay, I understand. Could you just clarify what you meant by ‘ So if it's just you dropping out, it's your computer, but if everything drops out, it's the Wifi AP/Modem’.
You have devices connected to the Wi-Fi router, such as a mobile phone, two laptops, or a modem, and they all lose connection simultaneously. This suggests the issue lies with the Wi-Fi access point itself. If only your computer disconnects while others stay online, the problem may be related to your device or its position. For instance, microwave ovens placed between the computer and the AP can interfere with the signal.