Apklike Store →

Apklike Store →

Get network protocol analyzer capabilities, on your Windows machine, to quickly conduct deep packet analysis to resolve network and security issues.

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apklike store

Detect network performance
bottlenecks in their tracks.

Omnipeek analyzes the packet data and provides intuitive visualizations to help solve network and application performance issues and investigate security incidents.

apklike store

Omnipeek Delivers:

  • Packet capture and analysis that analyzes the data for you
  • Recordings of exactly what happened for analysis of network, application, and security issues
  • Stunning visualizations of analyzed data to quickly solve problems
  • Expert analysis of network data, including voice, video, and wireless

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The world’s easiest to use network protocol analyzer.

apklike store

Accelerate mean time to resolution

Get the right data at the right time to solve even the most complex issues with actionable metadata, forensic packet analysis, and packet data visualization.

apklike store

Magnify network monitoring and visibility

See more with unprecedented real-time visibility into networks and applications, including voice, video and wireless. Visualize packet-based analytics by flow and in full-color graphics.

apklike store

Solve network issues with built-in insights

Built-in, real-time analysis of hundreds of common network problems, including automatic alerts based on expert analysis or when configured network policies are violated.

What you can do with Omnipeek.

Real-Time Analyzer

Real-time network protocol analyzer for any network.

Omnipeek provides real-time analysis for every type of network segment – 1/10/40/100 Gigabit, 802.11, and voice and video over IP – with Omnipeek’s advanced hardware. 

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Intuitive Visualizations

Monitor and troubleshoot voice and video quality.

Monitor and troubleshoot voice and video over IP traffic with high-level multi-media summary statistics, call playback, and comprehensive signaling and media analyses. 

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Analytics Workflow

Best-in-class network analytics workflow.

Omnipeek analyzes data on-the-fly, providing real-time analytics and visualizations of the entire data set. Omnipeek starts with the metadata representing the network. All flows are automatically analyzed, eliminating the need to analyze the data flow-by-flow like open-source solutions. The goal is to only view a packet decode when absolutely necessary.

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Remote Monitoring & Troubleshooting

Monitor distributed networks from anywhere.

Omnipeek extends network monitoring and visibility for troubleshooting network and application issues at remote sites and branches, WAN links, and data centers through it’s integration with LiveWire appliances and virtual software. Securely troubleshoot remote devices from anywhere, leveraging the full analytical power of Omnipeek.  

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WiFi Troubleshooting

Enhance WiFi speed and security.

Connect the Omnipeek WiFi adapter, a USB-connected WLAN device, for wireless packet capture. Omnipeek provides dashboards for wireless analysis and provides the unique capability of capturing wireless data on multiple channels simultaneously, which is critical in today’s mobile environments.  

Watch Video

St. Luke’s University Health Network uses LiveAction to proactively diagnose and troubleshoot systems critical to patient care.

“Without Omnipeek, we could only see the symptoms and from there we had to try and guess what was happening in the background. With Omnipeek, we can actually see the packets. We could see the client trying to connect to the access point and being rejected. Previously, the access point was simply saying ‘No, I am not going to let you come in.’ We had no idea that was happening or why.”

– Kevin Allen Network Manager,
Northern NSW Local Health District

Resources

Apklike Store →

Apklike was a marketplace and a modest rebellion: an experience designed for curious users and makers who valued clarity, control, and community. It didn’t promise to replace the big stores; instead, it offered a different rulebook—one where apps were invitations rather than commodities, and where the small, useful, and humane could still find a place on the shelf.

Maya left with PocketGarden installed and a list of small utilities to try later: a text cleaner for writers, a tiny offline map for trail walkers, an app that turned old phone speakers into a DIY intercom. On the walk home in the steady rain, she felt a quiet satisfaction, as if she’d rediscovered a simpler way of picking tools—one guided by people, not just metrics.

What gave the store its heartbeat was the community. Developers wrote behind-the-scenes posts, hobbyist groups formed around shared interests, and occasional virtual meetups introduced new creators to curious users. The platform’s editorial team highlighted stories—an app that digitized family recipes, a mapping tool built by cyclists to highlight safe routes—framing software as an expression of lived needs rather than pure commerce. apklike store

The store supported independent developers with clear, fair policies. Revenue models were flexible: one-time purchases, optional subscriptions, and pay-what-you-want tiers. There was an easy-to-find section that explained permissions in plain language—what data an app needed and why—along with simple privacy controls. Maya liked that; she felt empowered to make choices without digging through legalese.

Yet apklike wasn’t a utopia. Some apps were experimental and buggier than polished store listings. Reviews were candid; users sometimes recommended alternatives or pointed out missing accessibility features. The curation’s human element meant favorites could be eclectic and subjective, never a perfect match for everyone. And while many developers were small and earnest, a few listings were thin and unmaintained, reminders that discovery carries the risk of wasted downloads. Apklike was a marketplace and a modest rebellion:

Maya tapped an app called PocketGarden, a tiny gardening planner built for balcony growers. The app’s description included planting zones and simple reminders, but also a note from the developer about using reclaimed pots and low-water seeds. Community comments below were thoughtful—tips, troubleshooting, and occasional recipes for unexpected harvests. There was no barrage of targeted ads, no pop-up pressuring a five-star rating. Feedback seemed to matter; updates included user-suggested features and honest changelogs.

What struck her first was the diversity. Next to widely known productivity apps were single-developer tools for amateur astronomers, a minimalist journaling app created by a teacher, and a lightweight photo editor whose founder posted updates about beta fixes and user suggestions. The store’s pages didn’t just list features; they told small stories: why the developer made the app, whom it served, and what trade-offs were made to keep it small and nimble. That transparency felt rare; it invited trust. On the walk home in the steady rain,

The sign above the storefront was modest: a simple lowercase logo and the word apklike, the kind of name that promised convenience rather than spectacle. Inside, the air smelled faintly of fresh coffee and warm plastic—screens displaying app icons like glossy merchandise in a boutique. People moved through the aisles of recommendations with the languid focus of shoppers hunting something useful, not something flashy.

Take Omnipeek®
for a Test Drive!

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apklike store