I recently got a wireless adapter (TP-Link Archer T2UH V1). After plugging it in, I found out that the drivers for Linux are not native on Ubuntu. They do, however, have the drivers available for download (in the form of compilable/ makefile). What I am not sure of is how to install these drivers. I know that I need to build the drivers, place things where they need to be, and tie things together with the kernel. I am not sure how to do this, however, and need some help.

I have a TP-Link T2U Wi-Fi adapter and I was in struggle to find a working driver for Ubuntu 18.10. All the drivers, original and modified, was for previous version of the kernel but nothing useful for the 4.15 kernel. After a painful morning I found a working link to run the TP-Link T2U on the latest kernel.


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After these steps the device should work. If you want the driver to work after the updating the kernel I advise to follow the next steps that includes the dkms utility. You will need to work in the directory "mt7610u-linksys-ae6000-wifi-fixes" otherwise the process will not work.

Thanks for your response! Yes I removed the old wireless card and disconnected the connector, inserted the new wireless card into the same PCIe slot and plugged the new card into the motherboard. The old card is no longer in the computer.


@Jocelyn_Intel Thanks for your response as well! That is all good information to know. To be honest I did think it was weird that their driver pack brought me to the intel site. The card came with a CD installation, but my PC does not have a CD rom so their instructions send you to their home page, and when you click on the driver download for that model card it redirects to the intel driver download site. I guess my whole problem is that I'm weirded out that its using the intel drivers, that it works with different intel drivers than the ones it had me download, and mainly that my PC isn't recognizing it as the card that it is but as an intel wireless Adapter. All very strange, but I appreciate the info.Ā 


@Podaen Thanks for that link! I will try that. Those steps look very similar to what I have tried a couple times except for using a different PCIe slot and trying to show hidden devices, I'll have to look around for that, but I thought I could see my wireless adapter, and I was selecting uninstall while also checking "remove associated drivers" and then when I was reinstalling the drivers it was showing up as the same wireless adapter rather than the new one of the different brand. But anyway thanks a bunch for taking time to post that help, much appreciated!

I'm hoping someone here can help a newbie... I bought a wireless adapter (TP-Link Archer T4U) that I am planning to use on my laptop with a 2.4G Wi-Fi network card to speed up my Wi-Fi and resolve some connectivity issues... I have Fedora 36 installed (kernell 5.18.15-200.fc36.x86_64) but the driver they have for Linux is for kernel version 2.6.18~4.4. Will the driver still work for my OS since it's for different kernel version or not?

Hello, I have a tp-link tl-wn722n and I'd like to add it to my netgear WNDR3700's usb to act as a wireless client (WWAN). Right now the neatgear's 2.4ghz is acting as a client and the 5ghz as the actual wifi network. I want to substitute the wifi with the usb wifi adapter, but I don't know how.

I am using Kali Linux on my laptop and my laptop's internal Wi-Fi adapter is not working, so I have an external USB adapter. Now after the installation I plug my Wi-Fi adapter and Linux is not showing it and I also don't know how to install its driver so help me what should I do in this situation.

I had a Mac book pro (2017) and Archer T2U Nano. And I found the method on the below Git hub link then I download the driver Wireless USB OC Big Sur Adapter-V5 and follow the instructions to install it.

Hello, thank you very much for the valued and detailed instructions on sharing the steps to install the wireless adapter on your macOS Big Sur, it's glad to know this works good for you. I think this will help a lot of customers who are waiting for the new driver of the adapters.

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.

If you lost your network connection immediately after upgrading to or updating Windows 11, 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:

If you could successfully install updated drivers for your network adapter, then reinstall the latest updates. To do this, select StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  > Windows UpdateĀ  > Check for updates.

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:

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

I have reinstalled octopi. When I do sudo lsusb. It shows the tp-link tl-wn823n in the usb devices. But when I do Ifconfig it doesn't show the wlan0. and the dongles led light doesn't blink whatsoever.

I am trying to use a USB adapter to connect a desktop that can't be connected to wifi because of the area it is located. I have one desktop connected via Ethernet cable. How do I get the standalone driver installed on the other desktop if I can't get connected to the internet? Can I just move and connect the desktop to where my wifi is connected, install the windows standalone driver then move it back to and insert the adapter?

I had been using a Netgear USB WiFi adapter. It required no driver installation or anything. It stopped working two days back, probably because it is too old now.

I unboxed my wifi dongle which I purchased as a backup - a D-Link DWA 131 USB adapter. And it is not working.

Finally, I have booted in windows, and am typing this post. Probably the GitHub link I posted may be the right driver, but I am too dumb with source files and stuff. Maybe a user here can help me get my wifi dongle working. Thanks!

Configuring wireless is a two-part process; the first part is to identify and ensure the correct driver for your wireless device is installed (they are available on the installation media, but often have to be installed explicitly), and to configure the interface. The second is choosing a method of managing wireless connections. This article covers both parts, and provides additional links to wireless management tools.

Also check the output of the ip link command to see if a wireless interface was created; usually the naming of the wireless network interfaces starts with the letters "wl", e.g. wlan0 or wlp2s0. Then bring the interface up with:

Unified driver for Ralink chipsets (it replaces rt2500, rt61, rt73, etc). This driver has been in the Linux kernel since 2.6.24, you only need to load the right module for the chip: rt2400pci, rt2500pci, rt2500usb, rt61pci or rt73usb which will autoload the respective rt2x00 modules too.

Realtek chipsets rtl8811au, rtl8812au, rtl8814au and rtl8821au designed for various USB adapters ranging from AC600 to AC1900. Several packages provide various kernel drivers, these require DKMS (the dkms package and the kernel headers installed):

If the WiFi adapter is not getting detected after finishing a session in Windows, this might be due to Windows' Fast Startup feature which is enabled by default. Try disabling Fast Startup. The iwlwifi kernel driver wiki has an entry for this.

i have Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX200 , how do i know the version of my driver , can u write that command line in the 5 step for me ( im Linux beginner and my english is not good sorry ) , have been stuck with no wifi adapter found for 3 days

These ralink adapters are plain ol' sh*t. I'm not sure if this will be a complete fix for you, but I've been wresting with my network adapter for months and this has proven to be the most effective for my computer. I have an HP Envy fortunate enough to be equipped with a Ralink RT3290, running windows 8.

I simply uninstalled the driver from my comp. Yes, really. When a component on your comp has it's driver stripped, Windows software has a few drivers that will install by default for your hardware so that it can remain functional on your computer. So, once removing the ralink driver from my computer, windows installed it's default driver for my network adapter and... Voila! My connection problems are practically non-existant at this point. The hardware is still not the best but I can at least browse the net in my room without my connection experiencing constant dropping out.

Now, other than the wireless button light stuck with an orange glow, and device manager listing my network card as #10, I am still using this driver with minimal issues. Occasionally, it will forget the connection once I awaken the laptop from sleep, but this issue was much, much worse with the ralink drivers than without.

If you are fully aware of the risk involved (which is little, to be realistic, this can always be undone & you can always re-install the ralink drivers if this deosn't prove to be an effective solution), I will explain in detail how I managed to do this.

4) - A popup should appear and you should be given the option to proceed with the uninstall or cancel it. Make sure to check the "delete driver software for this device" before you proceed or else windows will re-install the ralink driver. 2351a5e196

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