WirelessNetView is a small utility that runs in the background, and monitor the activity of wireless networks around you. For each detected network, it displays the following information: SSID, Last Signal Quality, Average Signal Quality, Detection Counter, Authentication Algorithm, Cipher Algorithm, MAC Address, RSSI, Channel Frequency, Channel Number, and more.
Command-Line Options
/stext <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into a regular text file. |
/stab <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into a tab-delimited text file. |
/scomma <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into a comma-delimited text file (csv). |
/stabular <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into a tabular text file. |
/shtml <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into HTML file (Horizontal). |
/sverhtml <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into HTML file (Vertical). |
/sxml <Filename> | Save the list of wireless networks into XML file. |
/sort <column> | This command-line option can be used with other save options for sorting by the desired column. If you don't specify this option, the list is sorted according to the last sort that you made from the user interface. The <column> parameter can specify the column index (0 for the first column, 1 for the second column, and so on) or the name of the column, like "SSID" and "Last Signal". You can specify the '~' prefix character (e.g: "~SSID") if you want to sort in descending order. You can put multiple /sort in the command-line if you want to sort by multiple columns. Examples: WirelessNetView.exe /shtml "f:\temp\wireless.html" /sort 2 /sort ~1 WirelessNetView.exe /shtml "f:\temp\wireless.html" /sort "~Security Enabled" /sort "SSID" |
/nosort | When you specify this command-line option, the list will be saved without any sorting. |