You will need to be connected to your WiFi (Hub or Pod) and you should be able to see both Hub and Pod in your Broadband tab. If your Broadband tab is showing your WiFi network as a device-view, tap the WiFi / switch symbol in the middle, to flip the view round to your Hub and Pod.

Requires iOS 9 or later and Android 5 or later. Virgin Mobile customers: the app will work in a device where a Virgin Mobile SIM is present and setup has been completed. Virgin Fibre customers: the app will work on a device where setup has been completed using My Virgin Media account details. Virgin Fibre customers can use up to 7 devices on Virgin Media WiFi at any one time. For setup: Mobile data connection required for Virgin Mobile customers. Internet (Mobile data or WiFi) connection required for Virgin Fibre customers. UK only. Experience varies by location and number of users. It is not always possible to guarantee that we will be able to offer this app on every device, platform and operating system version or variant. Terms and conditions apply.


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With MediaConnect you can wirelessly connect your PC to your TV for unlimited access to online movies, photos, videos, social networking and more. Not to mention all the files, and documents on your PC. And, no additional equipment is needed. With Philips MediaConnect, your TV becomes your computer screen. No need to learn a new interface, all of your favorites are at your fingertips ready to be shared on your big screen TV from your PC, wirelessly.

If you live in an NYU residence hall in New York, you can register a game console and/or digital media device for use on the wired residence hall network or the "nyu-media" wireless network. Each student can register up to five devices. If you already have five devices registered, you must de-register one before you can add another.

The nyu-media password changes every academic year. If you are returning to your residence hall with a previously registered device, you'll need to update the password. Your RA or residence hall front desk has the nyu-media password. It is not the same as your NYU NetID password.


What if I don't see nyu-media?

The most likely reason is that your device has a Wi-Fi radio that's unable to connect to a 5 GHz network. In this case, you can connect to nyu-media2.4GHz using the same instructions. However, you should only use this network if you don't see the preferred nyu-media network.

In an effort to provide the best possible wireless service to a wide variety of users and devices, there are some additional Wi-Fi networks that should only be used in rare, specific cases. Anyone with an NYU NetID and password and is in an NYU location should, except in very rare instances, connect to the "nyu" network. These other networks include:

Tip: If you have previously connected to "nyu-legacy" or eduroam, your device may reconnect automatically, even when "nyu" is available. To avoid this, forget the other network (see below) and follow the instructions to connect to "nyu."

NYU Wi-Fi is in a lot of locations, but it's not everywhere. Make sure you're in a supported area. One of the most common answers to reports of slow or unstable NYU Wi-Fi is people trying to connect from a non-supported location.

Wi-Fi signals are not entirely contained within the buildings. This means that an NYU Wi-Fi signal may overflow into nearby streets and spaces that aren't NYU Wi-Fi locations. This signal will likely be weak and unreliable. Because most devices are not very smart about how they detect and connect to a signal, it's possible your device may latch onto this overflow since it has previously connected to NYU Wi-Fi.

Usually, if you update your NYU password, your device will prompt you to update your password the next time it attempts to connect to NYU Wi-Fi. However, this may not be true for all devices. If you're unable to connect because of this, you can forget and then re-add "nyu."

Although a network will remain available for future use, even after you've forgotten it, there may be times when you don't want to clear the saved credentials entirely (for instance, if it's particularly complex password you don't want to retype) but you also want to prevent your device from connecting to it unexpectedly. If this is the case, you can turn off autoconnect for that network. This process varies by device.

NYU takes issues with the NYU Wi-Fi network seriously and is always working to improve the service. However, there are a few things that are often interpreted as slow or unreliable wireless that are actually caused by something else. Below are some of the issues most commonly misdiagnosed as wireless connectivity issues.

Note: because of the nature of wireless radio signals, you may be able to connect to NYU Wi-Fi outside of a designated area (such as on the street outside of a building with NYU Wi-Fi). In these cases, incidental coverage outside of the designated space may be unreliable.

If you've reset your password for any reason, make sure your device is using the new password when it tries to connect. The way to do this varies by device. Some will prompt you to re-enter your password if authentication fails. Others may fail to connect without warning you.

Click "GO" to conduct a speed test for your Wi-Fi connection. The test will display your current wireless speed. Typical high-definition video streams use 5 Mbps. A result of 10 Mbps or more is considered adequate for general use.

First off let me say that my home connections, both wired and wireless, are generally rock solid as is my connection to the outside world but I do have a few locations where my phone struggles to connect to the wireless network

The problem I'm having is that after installing the app on my phone (Moto G7 Plus) the app initially saw my Hub 3.0 (enough to do the initial speed test) but after that any attempts to use the Home Scan option just repeatedly tells me that I need connect to my home network despite the phone itself showing near full strength for the WiFi signal and other apps happily making use of it

An additional problem I've encountered is that on a number of occasions after trying to use the app my hub just stops working*. The lights are on but there's no one at home so to speak, no internet connection, No WiFi service, not even a response to pings to 192.168.0.1 from a wired device

I'm a Virgin Mobile customer and I'm trying to enable hotspot access on my Pixel 4a via the Virgin Media connect app and it's failing every time I click on the "Get set for wifi hotspots" after a short period of time with "no server response" despite a strong wifi and 4g data connection as per the screenshots below.

the fact the superhub2 and 3 are awful routers and cannot handle much traffic anyway, why you would want to stress the superhub even more by adding public wifi hotspot traffic is also beyond me.. again .. correct me if im wrong!

Thanks Sku11meister, however my issue relates to setting up access to the Virgin hotspots on my mobile phone while I'm away from my house via my Virgin Mobile account so it doesn't relate to my Virgin Broadband connection (although I appreciate that a number of the hotspots they grant access to are via other customers home broadband connections, which as you say they have the option to disable if they want).

On previous mobiles I've had the hotspots working fine via the Virgin Media connect app and it's been quite useful when I've been away travelling around the UK so I can't say they've been poor from my experience, however in this case the app won't even configure the access profile for the hotspots on my phone so I can't access any of them.

It's a good question, and I've not seen a definitive statement around Android 11 support yet.


In the meantime as you're a Virgin Mobile customer, you can connect to the 'Virgin Media' set of hotspots manually using SIM authentication. Instructions on how to that are here:


 -based-wifi-eap-profile-settings


It won't configure your device for the airport hotspots or those in other countries. Those still need the Connect app to configure your device.


The 'Virgin Media' hotspots are those generated by Hubs opted into to do and on the London Underground.

Residents have the option of wirelessly connecting media up to three devices like gaming consoles, Smart TVs, blu-ray players, Apple TVs, and Roku Boxes. To get started, you have to register your device(s).

Hi I've just made a fresh installation of Arch Linux in my old Surface Pro 4 device.

When booted from the installation media (latest downloaded today), I could successfully connect to my home wlan through iwctl as stated in the wiki. Then I've completed the installation and chrooted into the target machine and installed netctl.

After reboot, I've used wifi-menu to connect to my home wifi and, despite I didn't get any error at first, I could not ping neither google.com nor 192.198.1.1 (that should be my router). It says (network cannot be reached).

After trying to configure netctl without success, I rebooted with the installation media, connected to wifi with iwctl, chrooted into my computer, removed netctl and installed iwctl (that is working when run from installation media). After reboot, I used iwctl to connect to wifi (exactly as when done from the installation media) but, again despite I don't get any message, I cannot ping any site or address or evan use pacman.

issuing networkctl says that wlan0 is degradated.

So it's not an hardware problem as it runs form the installation media and not on target machine (I guess they have the same kernel).

Can someone help me please as I'm stuck here... thanks! ff782bc1db

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