When the WiFi plug is pulled out, usually the device will be disconnected from the WiFi network. However, sometimes the device may still appear as connected, which may be due to the following reasons:
Cache connection: The device may still have cached connection information from a previous connection to the WiFi network. In this case, even if the plug is pulled out, the device will still appear as connected, but it is not actually connected to the network. Physical connection: If there is a physical connection between the device and the WiFi router, such as through a network cable, then the device can still communicate with the router even if the WiFi plug is pulled out.
Signal interference: Sometimes other devices or signal interference around can affect the stability of the WiFi connection. Even if the plug is pulled out, interference may remain, causing the device to appear connected but not actually connected to the network.
If you experience this, you can try the following:
Restart the device: Try to shut the device down and restart it, then try to connect to WiFi again.
Reconnect: In your device's Settings, find and click \"Forget Network\" or a similar option, then re-enter the WiFi network details and reconnect.
Check Network Settings: Check the network Settings of the device to ensure that the details of the WiFi network, such as SSID (network name) and password, are correctly configured.
Update drivers: If the device is connected to the computer via USB or other means, try to update the driver of the device to ensure that it is compatible with the current system.
If the above methods do not resolve the problem, contact the device manufacturer or technical support team for further help and guidance.
Although the plug is pulled out of his WIFI it has a transition period, it can not be cut off immediately. In five minutes, you'll see it cut off