3. I have never been able to detect 5.0ghz. I did some research and found that I can change the 'Properties' in the Advanced setting for the wifi adapter. In which, I selected the 'Dual band 802.11a/b/g' but it doesn't detect any 5.0ghz network available. I had tried to only select the 5.0ghz option yet it fails to work.

However, it is still unable to detect 5.0Ghz networks. In the Advanced tab of the Properties for the wifi adapter, dual-band 802.11a/b/g is selected. Yet, only the 2.4Ghz networks are detected. Do you have any ideas on what could be the cause?


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i never could get the intel dual band wireless-ac 8260 chipset to work reliably in several new (VERY expensive) Panasonic CF-54 laptops. my experience has lead me to believe the problem is the massive Proset bloatware, not the barebones drivers or the chipset.

Next, manually delete the two intel wifi driver files from Windows/system32/drivers, namely netwfw02.sys and netwfw02.dat OR netwfw04.sys and netwfw04.dat (or perhaps both or even some other number besides 02 or 04). This is an important step, because uninstalling intel driver software lately does not always actually delete the old driver files, and I've had replacement intel driver installs silently fail because they were unable to delete and/or replace existing driver files, leaving a total mess.

And that should be it. Windows should popup a balloon from the taskbar telling you that a new wifi device has been installed and you should be good to go. Not only should the intel wifi now function flawlessly, but you've also eliminated a massive amount of unnecessary bloatware, including several background processes that run at all times, consuming both CPU and memory.

Ok so, I think I found a solution (kind of). Basically, my WiFi router is a dual-band; I was previously connected to the 2.4 Ghz network and I've now tried tried to connect to the 5 Ghz network. All the problems seem to be gone.

8620 is a 2x2 chipset, dual-band, but not concurrent dual-band (2.4 GHz XOR 5 GHz) - and as you can see from iw list, there is no AP support on 5 GHz (No-IR, the ability to Initiate Radiation is required for that).

If the situation doesn't improve, I'll consider using an external dongle. But not a "nano" dongle, something larger, to be sure there is an improvement over the built-in wifi, which nonetheless has dual, long antennas.

After our internet provider switched us to a new router my laptop will no longer work on my home wifi, it works on some external wifi networks but not all. It connects and then says no internet and then cycles through connecting and disconnecting. My Latitude E7240 also has the intel dual band wireless AC 7240 card. Is my card incompatible with the new wifi formats? do I have a setting wrong? Do I need to install a different driver? I tried a nano-USb card which connected but the speed is so slow its not worth using.

In notebooks, meanwhile, Intel provided more details on "Banias," a new mobile processor coming in the first half of next year. Among other features, Banias notebooks will come with integrated dual band Wi-Fi (802.11 a and b) wireless networking.

"Well over 50 percent of notebooks in the next year will be configured with wireless, and over 80 percent of the Banias notebooks will have dual band wireless," said Anand Chandrasekher, vice president of Intel's Mobile Platforms Group. "Banias will become the predominant architecture for notebooks." 2351a5e196

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