Thanks — that output is exactly what I needed. Your Intel Wi‑Fi adapter is present but Disabled, and the Realtek Ethernet is Up (so the NIC hardware and driver are OK). Let’s focus on re‑enabling the Intel Wi‑Fi and getting a wireless connection. Follow these steps in order and paste back any command output or errors you see so I can keep guiding.
Quick summary of next actions (exact order)
1) Try a straightforward enable (PowerShell).
2) Ensure WLAN AutoConfig service is running.
3) Check Device Manager / radio / airplane mode / Fn key.
4) Reinstall Intel driver INF if needed (extract the EXE on Ubuntu or Windows and install with pnputil).
5) If still no Wi‑Fi, test Ethernet connectivity (ping) and collect a couple of diagnostic outputs for me to inspect.
Commands to run now (copy/paste into an elevated PowerShell or Admin CMD)
A — Re-enable the Wi‑Fi adapter
In Admin PowerShell:
Enable-NetAdapter -Name "Wi-Fi" -Confirm:$false
Get-NetAdapter -IncludeHidden | Format-Table -AutoSize
If PowerShell says the adapter name is different, use the exact Name from your earlier Get-NetAdapter output (e.g. "Wi-Fi" appears correct).
B — Check/Start the WLAN AutoConfig service
In Admin PowerShell:
Get-Service WlanSvc | Format-List Status,StartType,Name
If it is Stopped, run:
Set-Service -Name WlanSvc -StartupType Automatic
Start-Service -Name WlanSvc
Get-Service WlanSvc | Format-List Status,StartType,Name
C — Show WLAN driver & radio state
In Admin CMD / PowerShell:
netsh wlan show drivers
netsh wlan show interfaces
netsh interface show interface
Paste the outputs here. They’ll tell us if Windows thinks the radio is blocked (hardware/driver) or just disabled.
D — Check Airplane mode / Function key / BIOS
- In Windows: open Settings → Network & Internet → Airplane mode and ensure it’s OFF.
- Press the laptop wireless hotkey (usually Fn+F2 or the key with a radio icon). Do it once, then re-run Get-NetAdapter.
- If you have an external physical wireless switch, make sure it’s On.
- If nothing changes, reboot into BIOS (F2) and verify Wireless / WLAN is Enabled.
E — Device Manager check (GUI) — do this if PowerShell enable didn’t work
Open Device Manager → View → Show hidden devices → Network adapters → Right‑click the Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless‑AC 3160:
- If it shows “Disable” → that means it’s enabled; if it shows “Enable” → choose Enable.
- If it shows a warning icon → right‑click → Properties → paste the Problem Code or status text here.
- Under Power Management tab: uncheck “Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power”.
- Under Driver tab: click Roll Back Driver (if available) or Update Driver → Browse my computer → point to driver folder if you extracted it.
F — If the adapter remains disabled or shows ProblemCode
Run (Admin PowerShell) and paste the output:
Get-PnpDevice -Class Net | Format-List InstanceId,Class,Status,ProblemCode,FriendlyName
If a ProblemCode appears (non-zero), paste it exactly. I’ll translate and give the fix.
G — If the Dell EXE failed earlier (vendor installer error) — extract and install the INF manually (use Ubuntu since it has network)
On Ubuntu (works well to extract the EXE) — run:
sudo apt update; sudo apt install -y p7zip-full
mkdir -p ~/intel_extracted
7z x /path/to/Intel-3160-7260-3165-7265-Wi-Fi-Driver_5TJF1_WIN_20.10.1.1190_A00.EXE -o~/intel_extracted
Then copy the extracted folder (or the INF files) to a USB and to Windows (e.g. D:\Drivers\Intel). On Windows (Admin CMD) run:
pnputil /add-driver "D:\Drivers\Intel*.inf" /install
pnputil /enum-drivers
H — If driver install reports a signature or Secure Boot issue
Temporarily disable Secure Boot in BIOS, install the driver, verify Wi‑Fi works, then re‑enable Secure Boot if you want.
I — Quick Ethernet tests (to ensure internet access while we fix Wi‑Fi)
In Admin CMD:
ipconfig /all
ping -n 4 8.8.8.8
ping -n 4 google.com
If ping 8.8.8.8 works but google.com fails, it’s a DNS problem — paste ipconfig /all and I’ll show fixes. If neither ping works, paste ipconfig /all so I can check gateway/DHCP.
What to paste next (minimum)
- Result of Enable-NetAdapter (if any) and the post‑run Get-NetAdapter output.
- Results of netsh wlan show drivers and netsh wlan show interfaces.
- Output of Get-PnpDevice -Class Net (in step F) if it shows a problem code.
- ipconfig /all and ping results if Ethernet doesn’t give internet.
One more pointer
You previously had success installing the Intel package (you noted it “installed”), but the adapter is Disabled. That normally means one of:
- Software state = Disabled (fixable by Enable-NetAdapter or Device Manager).
- Radio/hardware switch or Fn key has turned radio off.
- WLAN AutoConfig service stopped.
- Power management or BIOS-level disable.
Run the Enable-NetAdapter and WLAN service commands first — they’re quick — and paste their outputs. I’ll interpret and give the exact next command (or the INF installation commands if needed).
(For context I reviewed our earlier driver/upgrade work in the thread — we’ve already tried driver installs and component repairs, and the driver store was rebuilt earlier, so the likely current issue is the adapter being administratively disabled or the radio/airplane state. See earlier troubleshooting steps in this thread as background.)
Ready when you are — paste the outputs requested under “What to paste next” and I’ll give the precise follow‑ups.