Poor WiFi performance on Windows laptop
In most cases, this can occur if your Windows computer is on battery power since some WiFi hotspots use wireless AP’s or routers that do not support the 802.11 Power Save protocol. Plug in and connect to the Mains and see if that makes a difference because when the PC is plugged into a power source, the wireless network adapter is configured to use Maximum Performance mode, which turns off the 802.11 power save mode. If connecting to the Mains does not work for you, you should configure the wireless network adapter to use the Maximum Performance setting when Windows is configured to use the Balanced power plan or the Power saver power plan. To do this, open the Power Options Control Panel applet and click on the Change plan settings link, next to the Balanced or Power Saver plan. Next click on the Change advanced power settings link. Now in the Power Options settings box which opens, scroll down to and expand Wireless Adapter Settings. Also next, expand Power Saving Mode. Now, click On the battery drop-down menu and select Maximum Performance.
Click OK and exit. If even this does not work for you, you should consider changing the Power Plan itself. By default, Windows uses the Balanced power plan. Use the High-Performance power plan and see if that helps. To do this, click on the Battery icon in the taskbar and select High Performance. You may also change WiFi Roaming Sensitivity or Aggressiveness to improve Wi-Fi reception & performance. You can also Improve Wireless Connection Latency with WLAN Optimizer. Also read: Let us know if this worked for you or if you have any other ideas!