OK, I've spent the last hour running around the house, switching things on and off, trying to identify all the devices that are connecting to our network. I have some data but I'm not sure what to do with it.
I've used Fing on my Android phone to list connected devices, and I've logged in to the admin console on the router to list connected devices.
I have 13 devices [UPDATE - 14 devices] which I have been able to positively identify and which show on both lists. In every case I have positively confirmed the MAC addresses.
- 192.168.1.10 - Loxone Miniserver
- 192.168.1.65 - [WiFi] Android tablet
- 192.168.1.66 - [WiFi] Sonos music player
- 192.168.1.67 - [WiFi] Android phone
- 192.168.1.68 - [WiFi] Amazon Fire TV stick
- 192.168.1.71 - [WiFi] Epson printer
- 192.168.1.72 - desktop PC
- 192.168.1.199 - Telegesis Zigbee Communications Gateway - not sure what this is, but it's sitting there conencted to our router and I think it talks to our smart electricity and gas meters
- 192.168.1.200 - [WiFi] Android phone
- 192.168.1.201 - [WiFi] Sonos music player
- 192.168.1.202 - [WiFi] Amazon Kindle
- 192.168.1.203 - Humax TV set top box
- 192.168.1.204 - [WiFi] Amazon Kindle
- 192.168.1.254 - Technicolor TG582n router
So far so good.
However, Fing also lists 4 devices [UPDATE - 3 devices] which I can't identify:
- 192.168.1.1 - something manufactured by D-Link - not currently connected, but obviously must have connected since I installed FING this afternoon
- 192.168.1.64 - [WiFi] something manufactured by Digiboard Inc
- 192.168.1.99 - something manufactured by TP-Link - not currently connected, but obviously must have connected since I installed FING this afternoon - I've checked the MAC address and it's definitely *not* any of the three TP-Link powerline adapters which I'm using
And the Technicolor router lists 9 devices [UPDATE - 8 devices] which I can't positively identify
- 192.168.1.1 - 'Unknown-c0-a0-bb-1c-6b-38' - the MAC address confirms this is the D-Link device which Fing saw connected to this IP address (but doesn't think is currently connected)
- 192.168.1.1 - 'Unknown-14-cc-20-bc-9e-02' - the MAC address confirms that this is the TP-Link device which Fing saw connected at 192.168.1.99 earlier
- 192.168.1.2 - 'Bradfield-SonyB' - our neighbours' surname is Bradfield and his laptop is a Viao - I think this is his laptop
- 192.168.1.4 - 'Unknown-bc-30-7e-05-5a-08' - but the MAC address says it was made by Wistron Neweb Corp
- 192.168.1.5 - 'Bradfield-SonyB' - our neighbours' surname is Bradfield and his laptop is a Viao - I think this is his laptop
- 192.168.1.7 - 'Unknown-00-1f-16-f3-20-1d' - no idea what this is, but the MAC address says it was made by Wistron Neweb Corp
- 192.168.1.64 - 'Unknown-00-40-9d-62-28-9e' - the MAC address confirms this is the Digiboard device listed by Fing
- 192.168.1.179 - 'huaweistb' - I'm guessing this our neighbours' TalkTalk set top box
So - 22 devices in total.
14 which I can positively identify, and which are listed by both Fing and the router
3 which I think are our neighbours', and which were listed by the router but NOT by Fing
3 which I can't identify but which could well be our neighbours', and were listed by both Fing and the router
2 which I can't identify but which could well be our neighbours', and were listed by the router but NOT by Fing
I'm a bit confused by the fact that the router thinks more devices are connected than Fing can find. Any ideas what might be happening here?
And both methods have been able to find devices which I can't identify. Some of those listed by the router are definitely my neighbours'; the others probably are.
Have we learned anything from this?