DTNT Is Live on Microsoft Store: A Field-Tech Network Tool from Denali Tech
DTNT started from a simple field problem: network work often turns into a shuffle between separate utilities. On a real AV, smart-home, or low-voltage job, a technician needs to understand the Wi-Fi, find devices on the local range, run quick speed checks, and save the right details before leaving the site.
That is why Denali Tech built Denali Tech Net-Tools, or DTNT.
Quick takeaway: DTNT is now available on Microsoft Store as a Windows field tool for Wi-Fi analysis, channel review, IP discovery, speed testing, saved profiles, and practical network checks.
Built from real field work
DTNT was not built as a lab-only network toy. It came from the kind of work Denali Tech handles every day: AV racks, smart-home systems, Wi-Fi coverage issues, device discovery, programming, troubleshooting, and support calls where time matters.
When you are standing in front of a rack or walking a home with a laptop, the best tool is the one that helps you get oriented quickly. DTNT is designed around that moment. It puts the common checks in one Windows app so the technician can move from Wi-Fi to device discovery to speed testing without losing the thread.
What DTNT helps with
The app focuses on practical network awareness instead of burying the user in enterprise dashboards. The goal is to make field work faster, clearer, and easier to document.
- Wi-Fi analysis: Review nearby radios, signal strength, security, and channel use.
- Channel work: Spot crowded areas before making Wi-Fi placement or configuration decisions.
- IP discovery: Scan the local range, identify responding devices, and open likely web interfaces when available.
- Speed testing: Check download, upload, latency, jitter, and packet-loss behavior from the same workflow.
- Saved profiles: Keep useful Wi-Fi and field details available for repeat work.
- Exports: Turn scan results into something easier to review later or share with a project team.
A closer look at the app
The best way to understand DTNT is to see the actual workflow: read the Wi-Fi environment, check the local device picture, test the connection, then keep useful site details for later.
Why Microsoft Store matters
For public release, the cleanest path is the Microsoft Store. It gives Windows users a more familiar install experience and gives DTNT a trusted public listing instead of forcing every customer through a manual file download first.
The Denali Tech website still keeps the product page, feature details, support information, legal pages, and portable fallback path available. But the main install direction is simple now: start from Microsoft Store, then unlock Pro when the advanced workflow matters.
Who it is for
DTNT is made for people who work around real networks, not just people reading network diagrams. That includes AV technicians, low-voltage installers, smart-home programmers, network troubleshooters, and small teams that need a clear Windows utility for site work.
It is also useful for homeowners or power users who want to understand what is happening on their own network without jumping through a pile of different tools.
Where to start
The full DTNT landing page has the current screenshots, Store link, Pro purchase path, support notes, and release information.
Get DTNT for Windows
Install from Microsoft Store, review the current DTNT workflow, or learn how Pro activation works from the Denali Tech product page.