Vaio Fit

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Laurence Jabali

unread,
Aug 3, 2024, 5:47:19 PM8/3/24
to perscerseven

It was not a dual boot. During installation, I picked "erase everything and install ubuntu". Still after installation, it tries to boot into Windows, and Vaio care recovery options show up. Of course recovery is not an option because I cleaned up the drive. Still, somehow vaio recovery remains. Any ideas?

The laptop originally came with Windows 8, and the stock Qualcomm Atheros Wireless N card. I did a clean install of Windows 8 Pro, and then recently upgraded to Windows 8.1. I have the Vaio Control Center, Vaio care, and the necessary drivers only. The wireless was working so far, needed faster card. So I decided to upgrade to the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260.

However, the 7260 AC wifi card is not recognized at all. The airplane mode can turn wifi off, but with airplane mode off, the Wifi adapter still shows up as disabled / grayed out. The Intel ProSet wireless utility also complains that the Wifi hardware switch is turned off, and needs to be turned back on first. (My laptop model does NOT have an external switch or key combination for Wifi enable/disable)

Did some research on google, and noticed people having success by taping pin # 20 and pin # 51 of the card. Unfortunately I could not find the pin layout diagram or a youtube video, nor do I have any experience doing this. Can someone guide me through this process? A picture or video could be useful, but I couldn't find any :-(

Unfortunately that did NOT work. I reset everything to defaults in the bios, rebooted the machine, and was able to log in to windows. The Wifi adapter shows up as disable (a red x mark over the wifi icon in the lower right bar).

I am somehow familiar with few older Sony VAIO models and I know they have hardware and software switch. Now, as you indicated it is possible this model does not have a hardware switch but I just found what seems to be a software switch.

Hey guys thanks soooo, sooo much for this post! I decided to upgrade my wife's laptop card from an Atheros in a Vaio SVE, but it just didn't work. I tried troubleshooting for hours and hours and I just kept getting the 'Red X' over the wifi bars. I thought it was a software problem so I did a full recovery back to Windows 7 from Windows 10 but it was still inoperable. I keep searching and right when I was about to give up and try putting the old card back in then I found this post. YOU GUYS SAVED THE DAY! Thanks so much!! I had to register on this site just to let you know that.

I registered just to say thanks. I have a Samsung NP700Z7C and when I installed this, the wifi worked great but bluetooth totally disappeared. Googled about 5 minutes and found this. 15 minutes later and everything works as it should. Thanks again.

This thread is a life saver!! My Sony Vaio now works with a 5ghz Intel WiFi Card!! I should point out that pin 20 is NOT on the same side that the antennas attach, but rather the BACK of the card. Pin 51 is on the side with the antennas. Once I taped the card correctly, the INTEL 7260 AC cards works perfectly in spite of Sony's misguided attempts to force me to buy a new computer if I now need 5ghz WiFI.

Many thanks to Intel for allowing this thread to stay up, even with the "at your own risk" warning. I have installed the Intel 7260 AC in older and less powerful computers than this Sony Vaio, so I knew there was no reason for it not to work except for misguided attempt by Sony to control modifications to a computer long out of warranty.

While I cannot stop anybody from trying to integrate the wireless adapter as described above I only want to make clear that if you proceed, it is at your own risk, and this is not approved by Intel since only the system manufacturer is entitled for such operation.

Do you think this would work for me too? I've tried everything I don't have wireless switch or fn key the wireless led comes on as soon as the power led does I'm using intel centrino n 2230 bought the AC 7260 device manager found it but only the wifi part no bluetooth it seems the wireless light indicator is for bluetooth/wifi with the 2230 card device manager sees bluetooth and wifi.

I can confirm this pin taping worked for me also, as wifi installed but I got no connection till after taping pin# 20 it got a connection and everything works AC/N bluetooth and pairing but my wireless led net to the power hdd battery lights doesn't come on most probably BIOS blocked but will be contacting sony for an upgrade list/ BIOS unblock as they are not in the PC industry anymore and I love my sony vaio I would prefer to keep it and just upgrade cpu/wifi etc then to buy a totally different brand laptop. A shame intel doesn't support these types of upgrades and companies block upgrades due to then no one would need to purchase a whole different laptop but I'm sure business would be much better for everyone.

So I'm having a very similar problem with my Vaio pro 13. The laptop shipped with a 7260N, which suffered from dropped connections and poor throughput, so I put in a 7260AC which worked flawlessly right out of the box in my linux installation. However, I'm trying to go back to windows wifi refuses to work yet bluetooth is just fine. My card is the NGFF version, so assuming the pin outs are the same as the mini pcie posted above, taping pins 20 and/or 51 did not resolve my issue. I'm ready to pull my hair out. Any ideas?

Many thanks!!! I have an AX200 160 mhz mini-pcie card (mpe-ax3000h bought in aliexpress) and I managed to get it to work on Linux after a lot of effort, basically forcing it to load the correct firmware from /lib/firmware, but on Windows I couldn't get it to work, no matter how many drivers I tried, even with a clean install it didn't work, until I read the "trick" to cover pin 20 xD immediately started working in Windows without doing anything else. The card is in an Acer Aspire E1-522 laptop with software wifi on/off button (with Fn button).

Intel does not verify all solutions, including but not limited to any file transfers that may appear in this community. Accordingly, Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade.

hey... i recently just got a sony vaio vgn-fe690p and last night my fn key started freaking out. there are shortcut number keys on some of my letters so i can hold in the fn key and the numbers will type... well now.. in order to use those letter keys i have to hold the fn key down.. does anybody know why this happend and why i now have to hold the fn key down in order to type simple sentences??? this is probably something really stupid and i'm just too much of an idiot to figure it out:- letme know asap if anybody can help me :lol:

I just checked your issue on my Vaio PCG-FX270. alot of the hotkey software is the same. Make sure Num Lock is not on, if it is, then you have to hold Fn to type the letters associated with the key shortcuts.

Prior to VAIO, partners had to resort to unsupported kernel level methods or inefficient virtual appliances to intercept and manipulate virtual machine I/O streams. This led to a variety of solutions, which were all implemented in different ways, and could potentially result in instability and operational complexity. The VAIO framework and program was specifically designed to address these challenges. Note that the program does entail a vetting and certification process for partners before a solution is officially VAIO certified. This is to ensure stability and provide a consistent user experience.

This paper provides a technical overview of VAIO. It highlights how VAIO enables the use of advanced data services without the need for expensive storage systems. The paper concludes with an overview of different filters developed by VMware and/or 3 rd party software vendors.

The I/O Filter not only intercepts and manipulates I/O depending on the implemented functionality, but it can also be responsible for acknowledging the I/O to the Guest Operating System. It is a bi-directional information and traffic flow. If an I/O Filter is written to do write caching, this can be implemented in a write-back or write-through modus. Depending on the implementation, the I/O Filter needs to be informed that the write data is committed to a storage device before placing it in cache.

Besides regular I/O, VAIO is also informed when certain control operations are performed. For instance, when a snapshot is requested by someone (or something), or a change to a VM or VMDK is requested (grow disk, stop VM, start VM, etc.) the I/O Filter is informed about this event so that this change can be taken in to account.

I/O Filters are applied to VMs and/or VMDKs through policy. The framework which is used for this is the Storage Policy Based Management framework, also known as SPBM. In order to apply an I/O Filter to a VMDK or a VM, a VM Storage Policy will first need to be created. In order to create one, you must have the appropriate permissions.

These storage policy components can then be used in VM Storage Policies. Notice that vSphere will create only these storage policy components, instead of creating full VM Storage Policies with a rule-set, similar to what is done with VMware vSAN and VVols. In the current release of vSphere, a VM or VMDK can only have a single policy assigned and applied. By using these Storage Policy Components, I/O Filter capabilities can be included in any VM Storage Policies. In other words, by using Storage Policy Components we can enable, for example, filter-based capabilities such as VM Encryption on a VVol based VM, which otherwise would not be possible were the filters represented as full policies rather than policy components.

Of course, it is also possible to create a VM Storage Policy which only contains a Storage Policy Component; this would be useful for VMs stored on traditional storage where Storage Policy Based Management is tag-based and tends not to be as prevalent. Figure 3 shows a VM Storage Policy with multiple Storage Policy Components included.

c80f0f1006
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages