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-   -   Laptop computer wi-fi issue (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1088788-laptop-computer-wi-fi-issue.html)

beepbeep 03-18-2021 07:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rfuerst911sc (Post 11264314)
My wife's laptop apparently was trying to load an update that must have been in storage/memory because her's won't connect either . I will have to look around to see if I have a cable to do a hardwire .

It is possible that W10 decided that update is of such high importance that it is viable to cut off Internet before it is applied. For example, if there is 0-day vulnerability that needs to be patched. So apply the update and reboot.

Neilk 03-18-2021 07:30 AM

Can you turn on the hotspot feature on your cellphone and use it to test that the laptop can make a wifi connection??

GH85Carrera 03-18-2021 08:38 AM

Go over to a local Starbucks, or McDonald's and see if you can connect to their WiFi. If you can, it is not your laptop.

rfuerst911sc 03-18-2021 09:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Neilk (Post 11264357)
Can you turn on the hotspot feature on your cellphone and use it to test that the laptop can make a wifi connection??

I just tried that but my laptop stated it could not connect .

GH85Carrera 03-18-2021 09:25 AM

In Win 10 you can go to the Windows Settings, Network and Internet, look towards the bottom and you will see Network Troubleshooter. Try that. It can sometimes rest the card and fix issues.

masraum 03-18-2021 11:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fanaudical (Post 11264199)
Mine did that - it wouldn't work until I connected via cable and got the latest Win 10 update.

Makes me think that the item vbelowv may indicate that you're running into the item ^above^.
Quote:

Originally Posted by rfuerst911sc (Post 11264484)
I just tried that but my laptop stated it could not connect .


cabmandone 03-18-2021 02:38 PM

IF... your computer has an ethernet port, get a cable and go hard wired to the router. I had a router puke out on me the other day. Wifi showed up as available but I couldn't connect wirelessly or by ethernet. Are you SURE your phone are connected? When I tried connecting my phone it wouldn't connect either. You could be running off of mobile data.

rfuerst911sc 03-18-2021 02:50 PM

I am sure our phones are connected to our wi-fi . I have double checked . And my wife has been streaming TV all day and that is wi-fi via the router . I will try a hard wire if I can find a cable and will try local McDonald's or Starbucks .

john70t 03-18-2021 04:49 PM

I experienced that the latest Win10 update actually disabled my HP laptop driver several days ago.
The WiFi button wouldn't change from orange to white

The previous time that happened was after uninstalling Wacom software.
(which I found out now sends user data to google).
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/wacom-tablet-sending-data-google-analytics#xenforo-comments-3571582

-HP doesn't even offer an OEM WiFi button driver on their website. Only 3rd party websites have it.

-HP Assistant software is a slow download and hefty install. Menu after menu. No help there.

-I tried repairing the driver with CCLeaner program repair but that didn't work either.

-I tried switching all the "wifi on" tabs through Win10 Settings which were either greyed out or did nothing as well.
Another odd and complicated menu system.

-The computer found and identified my router address/name but still refused to connect to it for some reason.
Network troubleshooter and repair didn't work.

-Switching to the "See available networks" on the lower right bar gave the options of:
"Turn on manually" (which already didn't work),
"Turn on in one hour" (which also didn't work) (And why the extended time option? Wasn't "In one minute" available?),
and finally "Turn on in one day" (which is what finally worked despite waiting hours and restarts etc etc)

-Terrible system for such a simple function.....both on the part of HP and Microsoft.

john70t 03-18-2021 05:05 PM

I've been looking at new laptops and many do not even have an Ethernet port to hardwire into.

pmax 03-18-2021 06:03 PM

Try this

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/fix-wi-fi-connection-issues-in-windows-9424a1f7-6a3b-65a6-4d78-7f07eee84d2c


Run network commands

Try running these network commands to manually reset the TCP/IP stack, release and renew the IP address, and flush and reset the DNS client resolver cache:

In the search box on the taskbar, type Command prompt. The Command Prompt button will appear. To the right of it, select Run as administrator > Yes.

At the command prompt, run the following commands in the listed order, and then check to see if that fixes your connection problem:

Type netsh winsock reset and select Enter.

Type netsh int ip reset and select Enter.

Type ipconfig /release and select Enter.

Type ipconfig /renew and select Enter.

Type ipconfig /flushdns and select Enter.

Uninstall the network adapter driver and restart

If the previous steps didn’t work, try to uninstall the network adapter driver, and then restart your computer. Windows will automatically install the latest driver. Consider this approach if your network connection stopped working properly after a recent update.

Before uninstalling, make sure you have drivers available as a backup. Visit the PC manufacturer’s website and download the latest network adapter driver from there. If your PC can't connect to the internet, you'll need to download a driver on a different PC and save it to a USB flash drive so you can install the driver on your PC. You’ll need to know the PC manufacturer and model name or number.

In the search box on the taskbar, type Device Manager, and then select Device Manager from the list of results.

Expand Network adapters, and locate the network adapter for your device.

Select the network adapter, and then select Uninstall device > the Delete the driver software for this device check box > Uninstall.

After uninstalling the driver, select the Start button > Power > Restart.

After your PC restarts, Windows will automatically look for and install the network adapter driver. Check to see if that fixes your connection problem. If Windows doesn't automatically install a driver, try to install the backup driver you saved before uninstalling.

Check if your network adapter is compatible with the latest Windows Update

If you lost your network connection immediately after upgrading or updating Windows 10, it's possible that the current driver for your network adapter was designed for a previous version of Windows. To check, try temporarily uninstalling the recent Windows Update:

Select the Start button, then select Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update > View update history > Uninstall updates.

Select the most recent update, then select Uninstall.

If uninstalling the most recent update restores your network connection, check to see if an updated driver is available:

In the search box on the taskbar, type Device Manager, and then select Device Manager from the list of results.

Expand Network adapters, and locate the network adapter for your device.

Select the network adapter, select Update driver > Search automatically for updated driver software, and then follow the instructions.

After installing the updated driver, select the Start button > Power > Restart if you're asked to restart, and see if that fixes the connection issue.

If Windows can’t find a new driver for your network adapter, visit the PC manufacturer’s website and download the latest network adapter driver from there. You’ll need to know the PC manufacturer and model name or number.

Do one of the following:

If you couldn’t download and install a newer network adapter driver, hide the update that’s causing you to lose your network connection. To learn how to hide updates, see Hide Windows Updates or driver updates.

If you could successfully install updated drivers for your network adapter, then reinstall the latest updates. To do this, select the Start button, then select Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update > Check for updates.

Use network reset

Using network reset should be the last step you try. Consider using it if the steps above don’t help to get you connected.

This can help solve connection problems you might have after upgrading from a previous version of Windows to Windows 10. It can also help to fix the problem where you can connect to the internet, but can't connect to shared network drives. Network reset removes any network adapters you have installed and the settings for them. After your PC restarts, any network adapters are reinstalled, and the settings for them are set to the defaults.

Note: To use network reset, your PC must be running Windows 10 Version 1607 or later. To see which version of Windows 10 your device is currently running, select the Start button, then select Settings > System > About.

Select the Start button, then select Settings > Network & Internet > Status > Network reset.
Open Network & Internet Status settings

On the Network reset screen, select Reset now > Yes to confirm.

Wait for your PC to restart, and see if that fixes the problem.

Notes:

After using network reset, you might need to reinstall and set up other networking software you might be using, such as VPN client software or virtual switches from Hyper‑V (if you're using that or other network virtualization software).

Network reset might set each one of your known network connections to a public network profile. In a public network profile, your PC is not discoverable to other PCs and devices on the network, which can help make your PC more secure. However, if your PC is part of a homegroup or used for file or printer sharing, you’ll need to make your PC discoverable again by setting it to use a private network profile. To do this, select the Start button, then select Settings > Network & Internet > Wi-Fi . On the Wi-Fi screen, select Manage known networks > the network connection you want to change > Properties. Under Network profile, select Private.

rfuerst911sc 03-19-2021 02:11 AM

Pmax thanks for taking the time to post but my head exploded reading it 🙁 . I will try a few more basic things , it that doesn't work I will buy another laptop .

rfuerst911sc 03-19-2021 03:44 AM

Update: Yesterday part of my trying to figure out/fix the issue I did a " network reset " with no results . For the heck of it I did another network reset 10 minutes ago and voila ;) it worked ! I am typing this update on my laptop . What caused the issue is still a mystery but for now it is working . Thanks to all that chimed in with suggestions SmileWavy

masraum 03-19-2021 03:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rfuerst911sc (Post 11265563)
Update: Yesterday part of my trying to figure out/fix the issue I did a " network reset " with no results . For the heck of it I did another network reset 10 minutes ago and voila ;) it worked ! I am typing this update on my laptop . What caused the issue is still a mystery but for now it is working . Thanks to all that chimed in with suggestions SmileWavy

Excellent. Glad you didn't buy another laptop.

cabmandone 03-19-2021 04:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by john70t (Post 11265240)
I've been looking at new laptops and many do not even have an Ethernet port to hardwire into.

Been that way for a few years now. My Dell Inspiron has no ethernet port. I keep two machines around with ethernet just in case I have some weird issue and need to download something to a thumb drive to reinstall on a system that won't connect.

BTW, first thing I typically do when I have connection issues is to remove the network from my system. Then I power cycle the router and do a restart on the computer at the same time. Once the router is back up and the computer is running, if the network appears, I reconnect by entering the network password. Seems to work for me.

Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 11265574)
Excellent. Glad you didn't buy another laptop.

But HP, Samsung, Toshiba, Dell... not so much... And Microsoft is going "well sh.t... that didn't work" :)

masraum 03-19-2021 04:30 AM

Aren't there USB>>Ethernet adapters available? I'd probably keep one of those around "just in case."

rfuerst911sc 03-19-2021 05:06 AM

Follow up update: I did not know but my wife did a network reset on her laptop yesterday and hers didn't work either . But this morning her laptop connected with no issues . Maybe the reset needed time to do it's thing ? I imagine Microsoft/Gates are very busy ...... . . . you know with the whole Covid vaccine/microchip install 😁 .All kidding aside I am glad we are both up and running again .

wilnj 03-19-2021 05:12 AM

While you’re at it, take a few minutes and log into your router.

Unless you’ve changed your router settings, they’re likely still the default with very low security.

Once logged in, look for an update to the firmware of the router, let that run and it may help prevent any other buggy issues.

masraum 03-19-2021 06:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rfuerst911sc (Post 11265626)
Follow up update: I did not know but my wife did a network reset on her laptop yesterday and hers didn't work either . But this morning her laptop connected with no issues . Maybe the reset needed time to do it's thing ? I imagine Microsoft/Gates are very busy ...... . . . you know with the whole Covid vaccine/microchip install �� .All kidding aside I am glad we are both up and running again .

Hmm, this begs the question, if you both performed an action yesterday that was ineffective, but then you performed that action again today and it was effective, was the fix due to the action being effective the second time or due to another factor that cleared up or was resolved over night of which you are unaware.

Unfortunately, I have to think that it was the ghost in the machine and we'll likely never know what the real root cause and repair was.

cabmandone 03-19-2021 06:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wilnj (Post 11265629)
While you’re at it, take a few minutes and log into your router.

Unless you’ve changed your router settings, they’re likely still the default with very low security.

Once logged in, look for an update to the firmware of the router, let that run and it may help prevent any other buggy issues.

Just be careful when you do a firmware update and make sure it cycles by itself. Updating firmware seems to be the easiest way to brick a router.


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