If you forgot your Wi-Fi network password, you can find it if you have another Windows PC already connected to your Wi-Fi network. After you find your password, you can use it on another PC or device to connect to your Wi-Fi network.

On another Windows PC or other device, connect to Wi-Fi as you normally would, and enter your Wi-Fi password when prompted. For more info about connecting to Wi-Fi, see Connect to a Wi-Fi network in Windows.


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If you forgot your Wi-Fi network password, you can find it if you have another Windows PC already connected to your Wi-Fi network. After you find your password, you can use it on another PC or device to connect to your Wi-Fi network. Here's how

I set my own Wifi password and am admin for my computer. I need to add a user, but the password is not what I thought I set. With several Wifi users I want to see my Wifi password so I don't have to set up everyone all over. In the Network Properties box, the "Show characters" box is grayed out and there is no UAC shield shown. Can I run that control panel as admin? How?

I have an AX setup that replaced an Orbi Pro setup. On the immediately prior AX setup, at least once a day the wifi would just disappear for everything (multiple devices showed no wifi). If I tried to reconnect, I was told my wifi password was incorrect. Only solution was a reboot, at which time everything would reconnect with no intervention. All of this was on the immediately preceeding firmware to the current release. After some troubleshooting, Netgear decided to replace the router (not the satellite). With the new router, I had several days of great connection (all on the new firmware btw), but then a similar problem started happening. First I would get slow downs during the day, then random streaming devices couldn't connect, then finally everything was kicked off and if I tried to reconnect, I was told (again on multiple devices) that the wifi password was incorrect. The difference was that now my devices show an active wifi connection (5 bars) but I don't actually connect. Again, only solution is a reboot. I had no problem with exactly the same clients on the Pro. The satellite is connected via wired backhaul. Any thoughts on what could be going on?

You might try temporarily changing the SSID name and PW to something different. Something fairly simple on both. Be sure to use the "forget this network" feature on phones and pads. Clear out old wifi profiles on other devices. Then connect up with the new info. See if the problem re-appears again.

20/40 cooexistence is off. 1pv6 is off. It has been set up from scratch since the latest firmware. Every client is the same versus the Pro setup (no new clients). Firmware is the latest one. Same problem as the next to last version except it shows a connection that won't connect vs not showing a connection at all and not allowing a connection. Still using the same security (WPA2), have manually set channels to various. On wired backhaul so distance isn't an issue. I have forgotten the network on multiple devices. Nothing changes. Increasing instability during the course of a day until all devices loose connection.

Just last weekend the RBR in AP mode became unplug by accident over night. I plugged it back in thinking the system would all come back to ready, Ah no. Both RBS were online however the RBRs UI showed them as disconnected. I could not get them to show as connected until I removed 1 switch from the mix and and then wirelessly resync 1 RBS then wire connect it. Been good since then. Crazy experience.

I want to find my WiFi password of my router. But I forgot it and I just bought a new PC and trashed out the old one. I had to come to work to write this! So far, I only have this code that finds the WiFi password of the saved WiFi:

I work for a school and we are setting up some ubuntu laptops for student use. The wireless password needs to be secure so students can't connect their personal devices onto the network. The problem we are facing right now is that the network manager lets you view the saved wireless passwords in plain text. I changed the permissions of the network config editor so students can connect to any other networks or even pull up the editor to view the password. So that fixed the problem.. So I thought.. I just realized that if the laptop can not connect to the network then it pops up an authentication needed error box and with the show password check box available again.. So students can figure out the wireless password. Does anyone know where I can turn off that checkbox option? Would it be under gconf-editor to a specific file?

Current config - ubuntu 10.04 currently have /home/username/.gconf/apps/nm-applet set to chmod 000 along with /usr/bin/nm-connection-editor set to 000 also. This is how I blocked access the password but when that box auto pops up because it can't connect and gives them the password on a silver platter its kind of hard to allow the students to use them.. BTW I am not the network admin so I can't just change that it only accepts wireless by mac address.. we have over 5000 machines on the network and roughly half have wireless so they aren't going to switch over any time soon.

Now, the connection will be configured automatically at boot, other users are able to use the network, but if they try to edit that network, they'll be asked to input your password. Failing to do that, means not being able to edit that connection, hence not being able to see the password.

If indeed, like you say, students can see the password when the connection fails, then that is a bug to be fixed, and not worked around. It's quite obvious that users should not be able to read other peoples personal information.

I think, but I am not sure, that preventing ordinary users from any control whatsoever over the Network Manager functions also prevents them from seeing the password. This is a setting I use in my lab, and I think I checked it to see if passwords could be visible, but that was long ago and I don't remember for sure:

It is possible to get the plain text password for the Wi-Fi network from your device's settings, but it's not apparent at first glance. If you have a phone or tablet with an Android skin, such as any Samsung Galaxy, it will be even less obvious than if you were using stock Android on, say, a Google Pixel model. Either way, it's fairly easy to find saved Wi-Fi passwords on Android, but not as easy as Apple recently made it on iOS 16 and iPadOS 16.

Now, hit the "Share" option below the network name and status. It will ask you to scan your fingerprint, scan your face, enter your PIN, or enter your password if you have security set up. Below the QR code that stores the network's credentials, you'll see the password in plain text.

Samsung adds a skin called One UI to the basic Android system, with One UI 5.1 for Android 13 being the newest version as of January 2023. So many elements look and behave differently than on a Google Pixel, including getting plain text passwords for saved Wi-Fi networks.

Next, select "QR code" at the bottom of the network's information. You can only get the QR code for the network you're connected to, which is the biggest difference between One UI and stock Android. Another significant difference is that you won't see the network's password in plain text. You also can't ask Bixby for it.

Google Lens will start scanning the image, and it may end up focusing on everything inside the QR code's perimeter, which won't show you what you need. If that's the case, manually expand the crop on the image to go past the QR code's perimeter.

Unlike above, most phones and tablets running stock or skinned Android 9 and earlier cannot generate QR codes with a Wi-Fi network's credentials embedded. There are apps that help you create QR codes for Wi-Fi hotspots, but you need to know the password, which isn't any help if you don't know it.

On Android 9 and earlier, the file containing saved Wi-Fi credentials is in a protected directory, and you can only access it if you're rooted (see Method 4 below). However, if you have received a QR code for a Wi-Fi access point from another device, you can use the Google Lens app or Lens in Google Photos to scan the QR code for the password.

If your phone is running Android 9.0 Pie or lower and you want to view the passwords for your saved Wi-Fi networks, the only way to do so is with a root app. It will work best if you have TWRP installed and used that to install Magisk for root.

When you first launch WiFi Key Recovery, the app will ask for Superuser access. Tap "Grant" on the pop-up, and it'll take you to a list containing all of the Wi-Fi networks that you've ever connected to. Each entry shows a password beneath it.

Does this work on Samsung Galaxy S10? My screens are different that what you show. I had to open the menu on the Wi-Fi screen and select Advanced > Manage Networks. That's where I found my saved networks. However, there are no options to share. I am running Android 10.

This doesn't work with my Samsung Galaxy Note10+ running Android 10. There is no "share" available. For those who have the same phone, search in Settings for "Manage" then click on "Manage Networks". All your previously connected wi-fi's are listed but there is no way to see the passwords nor the QR code. ff782bc1db

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