| Scenario | Recommended Setting | Why? | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Low | Prevents micro-disconnects during roam scans. | | Walking around a large home/office | High | Ensures you always connect to the strongest node. | | Typical mixed use (sitting & moving) | Medium | Best balance; switches only when truly needed. | | Troubleshooting "sticky client" (slow speeds) | High | Forces the device off the weak, distant router. | | Troubleshooting "ping spikes" / roaming loops | Low | Stops device from bouncing between two routers. |

One week, the human set Work-Pro to Work-Pro became an elite scout, constantly looking over its shoulder. Even while sitting perfectly still on the kitchen table with a solid 3-bar signal from the Kitchen AP, it would notice a faint whisper from the Bedroom AP upstairs.

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Low roaming aggressiveness is usually better for stability.

: Low roaming aggressiveness means devices will be more reluctant to switch to a different WiFi network, even if it offers a stronger signal or better conditions.

Set roaming aggressiveness to if you walk around with your laptop or phone, especially in a house with multiple mesh nodes or a large office.

Frustrated, the human switched the setting to Now, Work-Pro became stubborn. It bonded with the Office AP and refused to let go.

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If you move around a lot and find your internet slows down, move it to or High .

Once upon a time in a sprawling, three-story house filled with smart gadgets and mesh nodes, there lived a laptop named "Work-Pro." Work-Pro had a simple job: stay connected so its human could finish Zoom meetings without the dreaded "Connection Unstable" pop-up.