Google Wifi App
Google will end support for the Google Wifi app in July, the company tells CNET. The app had long served as the control center for the original Google Wifi mesh router -- now users will need to control their home network and router settings in the Google Home app, which already houses controls for the second-gen Nest Wifi mesh router, as well as Google Assistant and Chromecast devices.
© Josh MillerThe Google Wi-Fi mesh router.
Open the Google Home app for iOS or Android and select the correct Google account. When the app finds your device, tap Next. Tap Yes to verify the soundcheck, select a device location, and enter a name. Tap your Wi-Fi network, enter the password, and tap Connect. Add a new network: In the app, find the device, tap Settings Wi-Fi Forget This. Google Wifi network and router settings inside the Home app. You can see connected devices and their current bandwidth consumption, change their names, and check their MAC address. Turns your android phone into a Wi-Fi analyzer!! Shows the Wi-Fi channels around you. Helps you to find a less crowded channel for your wireless router. The Google Wifi app is compatible with devices running Android 4.0 or later or iOS 10.0 or later and is available in countries where Google Wifi devices are sold. Download the Google Wifi app from.
'We want to make it easier to manage all of your devices in one place, so we've migrated Wi-Fi functionality into the Google Home app,' a Google spokesperson said. 'Nest Wifi has always been set up in the Google Home app, so we're now bringing this same functionality to existing Google Wifi users.'
Wi-Fi uses radio waves to send and receive signals from your wireless router. These radio waves connect your devices to the internet. Wi-Fi transmits at frequencies of 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz. Generally, the faster the frequency, the faster the data transmission. Google Wifi is a dual band device, offering both 2.4 GHZ and 5 GHz Wi-Fi frequencies.
Here's how that transition will work. Starting May 25, Google Wifi users will only be able to add new devices or expand upon an existing setup by using the Google Home app. Then, in July, Google will end support for the Google Wifi app, remove it from all app markets and ask users to migrate their system controls over to Google Home.
To do that, you'll need to tap the plus icon in the top left corner of the Google Home app's home screen, select 'Import Google Wifi Network,' and follow the on-screen instructions. Users of Google's OnHub router will be able to migrate controls to the Google Home app as well, Google tells CNET.
Google Wifi App Speed Test
The company points out that the Google Home app offers additional Wi-Fi features like network insights, improved teleconferencing and Google Assistant voice support for hands-free speed tests and network pauses. If you're using Google Assistant or Chromecast devices as well, having a single point of control for everything seems like a good way to reduce app bloat.
Google Wifi App For Windows 10
For a time, the Google Wifi app included access to a handful of advanced network settings that weren't in the Google Home app, including DNS and Universal Plug and Play settings. Google largely fixed that last year, when it updated the Google Home app to include the bulk of those extra settings rather than simply linking out to the Google Wifi app for the additional controls.
'Most of the features and functionality that users know and love from the Google Wifi app [are] currently available in the Google Home app,' a Google spokesperson said, though some of those features will come via future app updates.
Specifically, Google says that the only Google Wifi feature that won't be available in the Google Home app come July is the ability to track speeds to specific network devices. That feature is set to return in the Google Home app's upcoming 2.38 release.