Most user face the Wi-Fi problem that were upgraded from Windows 7 or 8.1 to Windows. Here are some solution will work for those whose:
1. Wi-Fi is not showing available networks.
2. Wi-Fi shows limited connection.
3. Wi-Fi connection automatically stops and does not connect back.
This issue may occur if unsupported VPN software is installed on Windows 8.1 and is present during the upgrade to Windows 10. Older software versions contain a filter driver (the Deterministic Network Enhancer) that is not upgraded correctly. Windows 10 provide the driver for Wi-Fi but it may not work well with your hardware, so make sure you've proper Wi-Fi driver installed in your PC or Laptop. If updating or reinstalling Wi-Fi driver does not solves the problem. You can try the below solution to fix Wi-Fi problem in Windows 10.
Solution #1. Command Prompt Command
Click Start menu and open Command Prompt (CMD) with Administrative rights. Type the command in netsh int ip reset and hit enter, restart your computer.
Solution #2. Power Management
Right click Windows icon, open Device Manager, click Network Adapters arrow to expand, then right click your wifi adapter,
select Properties > Configure.
now select the Power Management tab.
De-select the box that says "allow the computer to turn off this device to save power".
Solution #3. Resetting TCP/IP Auto-tuning
Open command prompt and enter the following commands one by one, hit enter.
netsh int tcp set heuristics disabled
netsh int tcp set global autotuninglevel=disabled
netsh int tcp set global rss=enabled
Now restart your PC or Laptop.
Solution #4. Registry
Right click the Start button and select "Command Prompt (Admin)" from the menu. Now enter the following command one by one and hit the Enter key each time.
reg delete HKCR\CLSID\{988248f3-a1ad-49bf-9170-676cbbc36ba3} /va /f
netcfg -v -u dni_dne
Restart the computer and check back with your Wi-Fi settings.
1. Wi-Fi is not showing available networks.
2. Wi-Fi shows limited connection.
3. Wi-Fi connection automatically stops and does not connect back.
This issue may occur if unsupported VPN software is installed on Windows 8.1 and is present during the upgrade to Windows 10. Older software versions contain a filter driver (the Deterministic Network Enhancer) that is not upgraded correctly. Windows 10 provide the driver for Wi-Fi but it may not work well with your hardware, so make sure you've proper Wi-Fi driver installed in your PC or Laptop. If updating or reinstalling Wi-Fi driver does not solves the problem. You can try the below solution to fix Wi-Fi problem in Windows 10.
Solution #1. Command Prompt Command
Click Start menu and open Command Prompt (CMD) with Administrative rights. Type the command in netsh int ip reset and hit enter, restart your computer.
Solution #2. Power Management
Right click Windows icon, open Device Manager, click Network Adapters arrow to expand, then right click your wifi adapter,
select Properties > Configure.
now select the Power Management tab.
De-select the box that says "allow the computer to turn off this device to save power".
Solution #3. Resetting TCP/IP Auto-tuning
Open command prompt and enter the following commands one by one, hit enter.
netsh int tcp set heuristics disabled
netsh int tcp set global autotuninglevel=disabled
netsh int tcp set global rss=enabled
Now restart your PC or Laptop.
Solution #4. Registry
Right click the Start button and select "Command Prompt (Admin)" from the menu. Now enter the following command one by one and hit the Enter key each time.
reg delete HKCR\CLSID\{988248f3-a1ad-49bf-9170-676cbbc36ba3} /va /f
netcfg -v -u dni_dne
Restart the computer and check back with your Wi-Fi settings.
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