Hi All,
Have a bit of a strange issue which is being seen on a large number of our devices:
We push a WiFi profile via Group Policy to connect to an non-broadcast SSID which allows for access to our corporate domain. On our Windows 7 devices, we occasionally see an issue connecting to networks with the following Intel cards:
AC7265
AC7260
AC8265
AC8260
I have a device with me at the moment where i see the following scenarios when starting the device:
1. Hidden network is seen and connects fine (the working state)
2. No networks are seen at all
3. All broadcast networks are seen but unable to connect with the 'Unable to connect' error message
In scenarios 2 and 3, if i disable and re-enable the Wireless NIC card, once it's enable, i see no issues. Networks connect and they are all seen. Following a reboot, we're back at square one and the NIC needs to be disabled and enabled again. I've removed all software from the device which may have any interference (VPN clients / AV etc.) but the issue remains.
Any recommendations? Have this logged with Microsoft but they're unable to give me any ideas yet!
連結已複製
Hello DaveB82,
Thank you for contacting us; it will be more than a pleasure to help you.
In this case, please perform a clean install of the latest drivers using the following guide:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000022173/network-and-i-o/wireless-networking.html
Here is the link for the latest drivers:
https://downloadcenter.intel.com/download/27991/Intel-PROSet-Wireless-Software-and-Drivers-for-Windows-7-?product=83635 https://downloadcenter.intel.com/download/27991/Intel-PROSet-Wireless-Software-and-Drivers-for-Windows-7-?product=83635
Please update the drivers and let us know the outcome.
As well, in order to isolate the issue, have you tried to take one of those machines out of the network environment?
Or tried to connect it into a different network that does not belong not the corporate domain?
If the issue still persists after taking the machine out of the environment, please let us know.
I hope this helps.
Regards,
Diego S.
