Howeveron the forum in the link I also had the netwtw10 error as well because the older driver I had installed would throw that up instead of the netwtw12 in the event viewer. If I use the latest driver on either the motherboard manufacturer or on the intel website it will not fix the issue even on a clean install of windows 11 it still seems to have the same problem.
AC Wifi 5 Router does not have any settings to run on AX, only Wifi 6 and 6E wifi routers have that setting, further AC routers can connect 80 MHZ max. Wifi 6 160 MHz is native,, 211AX wifi 6E has 3 bands and runs best on 6Ghz band and for that need a 6E wifi router and may be able to squeeze by with Wifi 6 router.
My router supports 160Mhz channel width. Also the Wi-Fi adapter is backwards compatible with older connection types such as ac,n so there should be no issue with connections. Also when I google max channel width for ac it has 160Mhz as the max.
Hi SpaceChrome, I've been having the same problems and may have found a partial fix. My motherboard is a Z790-P Wifi 6E, also has the AX211, and comes with two attachable wifi antennas. Out of curiosity and stupidity, I decided to remove one of the antennas (although I could never recommend doing this), and that somehow has fixed the stability issues.
Thanks for your patience. Based on the investigation, I recommend you try the latest driver version 22.230.0 and if the issue persists with this driver, you must check with MSI since the wireless card may need to be replaced.
Intel AX211 is a tri-band wifi card with preference to 6 Ghz band @160Mhz . Its trying to handshake at 6 Ghz connection speed. Buy a wifi 6E router and problem solved, a very very few AX211 cards run well on Wifi 5 not only is Wifi 5 limited to 80 Mhz, there many many more features that Wifi 5 is missing and that a Wifi 6E card is expecting and trying to load the drivers for. You have a high end wifi card why not a matching wifi router ?
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So I have a small router I'm connected to through an ethernet cable, and I'm having multiple devices connecting to that router through wifi, so they can view my computer screen. Screen sharing on Windows 7. At the same time I would like to use my wifi adapter to connect to a different router which is connected to the internet. So far I can't do them simultaneously.
-First I just tried simply connecting to the wifi and plugging in the cable, but windows gave preference to the ethernet I presumed because the screen sharing was working but I couldn't get to the internet.
-Third I tried manually tweaking the metrics in the advanced properties for each adapter to give connection preference to wifi. This half works. I can start screen sharing and that works, and I can connect to the internet wifi network, but when I try to access it (ex. open google chrome), my screen sharing connection is killed. And this is vice versa if I got to the internet first.
Select the wired connection, then edit its properties. Select Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) and edit the properties. Select Use the following IP address and type in a static address. This is probably assigned to you by an administrator. Leave the Default gateway blank. A subnet mask that will usually work is 255.255.0.0. You also need the IP of your DNS server from above, if applicable.
So finnally I've ended up setting Wifi to metric 2, LAN to metric 1 (All dhcp enabled and ip dinamic all by default just changed the metric)Then i download virtualbox and use the Tiny W7 iso of 800mb. I say to virtualbox to use Wifi network driver to the virtual machine and uala free proxy internet conection.
I am on windows 10. I right clicked on the network icon, the chose 'change adapter options'Then, right clicked on the ethernet connection to select its properties. I then unticked "Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4)...pressed okay and voila. i can browse with my next router option. Seems after this my locally connected devices couldn't connect so i just re-enabled TCP/IPv4. Still connected ?
I do not know if the external Wi-Fi adapter works with the T3, but I do know that it costs more than the camera. You would be MUCH better off buying an updated camera with built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The Bluetooth makes the Wi-Fi setup a breeze.
However, understand this. A Wi-Fi enabled camera does not mean that it is fully networkable. All that it really means is that the camera can communicate wirelessly with other wireless devices using standard Wi-Fi frequencies and protocols.
I agree with Waddizzle, I bought a wifi card years ago and it was very disappointing and very slow...I have not used it since. I think the one I tried was from Eye-Fi or something like that I know it is lying around collecting dust somewhere and destined for eBay at some point.
A wi-fi card seems to be the only option, your first point would only enable a standard SD card to be wi-fi when inserted into an wifi adapter, not the camera. Once you remove the SD card you might as well use a computer that would allow you to share the contents via wi-fi or Bluetooth or direct.
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