I
ImMicrohard
Yeah, so this problem has been going on for at least a week or two now, but I didn't start fixing it until about five days ago. Or at least I tried to, all to no avail.
Before this, my computer did disconnect to Wi-Fi numerous times before, and I wouldn't be able to get back online unless I restarted, and then after the restart, the problem would be resolved. To be fair, I guess maybe the reasoning for this is because my PC is just constantly slow, I'm not even sure how old it is because I just found it somewhere. It's a Compaq Presario CQ57 laptop that previously had Windows 7 installed on it, but it has since been updated to 10 (so, maybe 2009-2011?)
It all started a couple of nights ago when the Wi-Fi disconnected again (I think this happens around the nighttime, say 12am maybe?). So I go and restart just because, and I find out that the little globe with the "no" symbol is still there after the restart. I just said "whatever", and turned it off for the night. Then a few days later I turn it back on and the "Not Connected" is still there. I click on it, and there are no networks listed at all, and the "Wi-Fi" and "Mobile hotspot" options are gone. And the airplane mode option is also grayed out.
So I went on the network and internet settings to see what I could find. I tried troubleshooting, it wasn't really no help as it just told me to plug an Ethernet cable into the computer. On "Change adapter settings", Ethernet sure enough is the only thing that comes up on the list. No Wi-Fi at all. I do have a router with an Ethernet cable (it's connected to a cable box, though), so I eventually went and plugged it in to the computer, and I was somehow back online. Apparently, another person who also had this problem plugged in an Ethernet cable to the PC, and somehow the Wi-Fi networks came back up for them. That WAS the whole reason why I plugged a cable to the computer and, ultimately, it didn't work. Additionally I also fiddled with the sharing options, and it was also no help.
After about a whole day of trying to fix the problem, I figured a system restore would solve it once and for all. So I went back to a date before this occurred, and it didn't help at all. Matter of fact, it made things even worse because when I tried to log in about an hour later (I went somewhere and closed the PC for a while), the "background" for the login screen went blue, as in the screen when the PC shuts down, and sure enough the PC restarted. And it wouldn't boot at all. It just tried to "repair" itself, and I couldn't even get into the system anymore because it kept taking me to the recover option screen. Thankfully, I downloaded an ISO, reinstalled Windows 10 and the system boots fine now, so never mind this.
The only problem however, the PC STILL can't connect to Wi-Fi. So finally, I've seen many answers about going into the Device Manager, so I go check it out. There was this Microsoft Kernel Debug Network Adapter thing that I uninstalled, and then I tried to install another Wi-Fi driver that hopefully solved the problem. Despite downloading it and setting it up twice (I downloaded it via phone, then connected the phone to the PC and copied the files to the computer), it still did no effect to my computer at all. The driver I downloaded was "REALTEK SD Wireless LAN Driver" from the HP site (HP and Compaq are the same company). On second thought though, the driver doesn't even show up in the Device Manager, so maybe that could be it? Or maybe I just downloaded the wrong one altogether?
So, there IS a Wi-Fi button on the computer, but pressing it does nothing, it just stays orange no matter what (I never even paid attention to the light before, so I probably can't confirm if it's broken or not, but I do swear it was still orange even when it was connected). And no it's not a problem with the router at all, everything else still connects fine, except this PC which only seems to respond to Ethernet.
How else can I fix this?
Continue reading...
Before this, my computer did disconnect to Wi-Fi numerous times before, and I wouldn't be able to get back online unless I restarted, and then after the restart, the problem would be resolved. To be fair, I guess maybe the reasoning for this is because my PC is just constantly slow, I'm not even sure how old it is because I just found it somewhere. It's a Compaq Presario CQ57 laptop that previously had Windows 7 installed on it, but it has since been updated to 10 (so, maybe 2009-2011?)
It all started a couple of nights ago when the Wi-Fi disconnected again (I think this happens around the nighttime, say 12am maybe?). So I go and restart just because, and I find out that the little globe with the "no" symbol is still there after the restart. I just said "whatever", and turned it off for the night. Then a few days later I turn it back on and the "Not Connected" is still there. I click on it, and there are no networks listed at all, and the "Wi-Fi" and "Mobile hotspot" options are gone. And the airplane mode option is also grayed out.
So I went on the network and internet settings to see what I could find. I tried troubleshooting, it wasn't really no help as it just told me to plug an Ethernet cable into the computer. On "Change adapter settings", Ethernet sure enough is the only thing that comes up on the list. No Wi-Fi at all. I do have a router with an Ethernet cable (it's connected to a cable box, though), so I eventually went and plugged it in to the computer, and I was somehow back online. Apparently, another person who also had this problem plugged in an Ethernet cable to the PC, and somehow the Wi-Fi networks came back up for them. That WAS the whole reason why I plugged a cable to the computer and, ultimately, it didn't work. Additionally I also fiddled with the sharing options, and it was also no help.
After about a whole day of trying to fix the problem, I figured a system restore would solve it once and for all. So I went back to a date before this occurred, and it didn't help at all. Matter of fact, it made things even worse because when I tried to log in about an hour later (I went somewhere and closed the PC for a while), the "background" for the login screen went blue, as in the screen when the PC shuts down, and sure enough the PC restarted. And it wouldn't boot at all. It just tried to "repair" itself, and I couldn't even get into the system anymore because it kept taking me to the recover option screen. Thankfully, I downloaded an ISO, reinstalled Windows 10 and the system boots fine now, so never mind this.
The only problem however, the PC STILL can't connect to Wi-Fi. So finally, I've seen many answers about going into the Device Manager, so I go check it out. There was this Microsoft Kernel Debug Network Adapter thing that I uninstalled, and then I tried to install another Wi-Fi driver that hopefully solved the problem. Despite downloading it and setting it up twice (I downloaded it via phone, then connected the phone to the PC and copied the files to the computer), it still did no effect to my computer at all. The driver I downloaded was "REALTEK SD Wireless LAN Driver" from the HP site (HP and Compaq are the same company). On second thought though, the driver doesn't even show up in the Device Manager, so maybe that could be it? Or maybe I just downloaded the wrong one altogether?
So, there IS a Wi-Fi button on the computer, but pressing it does nothing, it just stays orange no matter what (I never even paid attention to the light before, so I probably can't confirm if it's broken or not, but I do swear it was still orange even when it was connected). And no it's not a problem with the router at all, everything else still connects fine, except this PC which only seems to respond to Ethernet.
How else can I fix this?
Continue reading...