Hi Kristeen,
John answered this while I was typing my reply. Just one suggestion as a quick
way to navigate to the correct menu in System Preferences > Network.
1. VO-M or Control-F2 to the menu bar, then arrow down
2. Press "L" to move to "Location"
3. Right arrow to the Location sub-menu, the
Awesome!!! That worked! I was missing a piece there with the control group.
Thanks again.
Kristeen
On Feb 14, 2012, at 10:25 PM, John Panarese wrote:
>In System preferences,, choosee Network.
> Then, navigate to the services table and make sure, wifi, is selected.
> Navigate to the, advanced
In System preferences,, choosee Network.
Then, navigate to the services table and make sure, wifi, is selected.
Navigate to the, advanced, button and VO-space on it.
Find the table of preferred networks and interact with it.
Select the one you want to remove and immediately stop interacting.
I can't find any way to remove the network. I have a preferred order, but the
computer seems to ignore that. How can I remove it?
Kristeen
On Feb 14, 2012, at 8:11 PM, Travis Siegel wrote:
> You can do one of two things.
> First, if you have sighted assistance, simply drag and drop the networks
You can do one of two things.
First, if you have sighted assistance, simply drag and drop the
networks into the preferred order (you can do this w/o sighted
assistance, but it's easier if it is done by someone with vision.
On the other hand, you can just remove the next door network from
you
I am using wifi and once upon a time I used a network next door because it was
available and I was replacing my router. Now, even though I am using my own
network, every time I reboot, or the computer goes to sleep, the network
reverts back to the next door one. I want to stop this behavior and