Lenovo includes a nice utility for building the system image and I used it to create an image on a USB flash stick. Once I had the image safely tucked away I went to the Windows 8. It installed a small app that when run made the Preview appear in the Microsoft Store for download and installation. It took several tries as the download kept crashing.
Finally a lengthy download 1. The installation was straightforward and once completed a couple of hours later the Tablet 2 had been upgraded to a stock system running Windows 8. The OS looked very similar to the Windows 8. I immediately started having problems with the Preview as wi-fi on the Tablet 2 kept dropping the connection. Sometimes it would reconnect automatically and sometimes it would require a reboot.
It made exploring the Preview difficult, but it's just a beta so such issues are to be expected. Just as problematic, the system would constantly drop the Bluetooth connection with the Lenovo keyboard. This always required a reboot to get reconnected so it kept interrupting the testing of Windows 8.
At one point the Bluetooth category disappeared from the settings menu indicating that the Bluetooth hardware was not recognized by the system. That quickly became frustrating as I was already seeing nice things in the update to Windows 8. The famous snap view improvements alone made the update worth it. Having flexible windows side-by-side is awesome and the way Windows 8 should have been from the beginning. I saw enough to make me desperately want the final 8. Sadly I didn't get to test the 8.
I was rebooting the system every few minutes and after a couple of hours I had to throw in the towel. User Account Control will then inquire about making changes to your computer.
Command Prompt will greet you in a new Window. To confirm that the TCP settings have successfully been disabled, type the command netsh int tcp show global and hit enter again. The window should then appear just as mine did in the screenshot below. Everything should be disabled except Receive-Side Scaling State. After the TCP settings have been verified, you should restart your computer. If none of these solutions worked in your favor, both Microsoft and Dell have allocated resources specifically to interrupted Wi-Fi connections encountered by Windows 8.
Additionally, there are a number of online forums, such as the official Microsoft Community , network dedicated entirely to helping PC users just like you with troubleshooting technical issues. Reset the network adapter First things first. Its no use! Driver is installed. Thursday, September 29, PM. Saturday, October 1, PM.
Hi, I have same problem in my Notebook. Any idea? I am having the same problem, but in a client version. Waiting for your answer. Thanks in advance. Got it working now, by installing the drive through browsing it directly from the source disk, thank you for concerning. The system reacts differently than older versions of Windows in that there's no "hardware wizard" to give you thumbs up or down.
I have yet to test with other hardware but it's like PnP is dead. Thank you a lot! I've got my breath back. This worked for me too in a Lenovo G, I used the Atheros driver as well.
Thanks a lot dude you just saved me from hustling with my wifi not working for the whole weekend. God bless. I have reintsall the Windows 8. Don't forget to choose wheen you istall Win 8. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads.
Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums W. Windows 8. Sign in to vote. Thursday, June 27, AM. I hope this helps someone. Now my Windows 8. Best regards and thanks for the help! Cesar" fixed my problem. Friday, June 28, AM. Ziegler 0. Any news on this? I have the same problem here! Proposed as answer by pstonebr Thursday, June 27, PM.
It won't let my wifi card start code Tried reinstalling the drivers and still no go. Edited by rmfjb Thursday, June 27, AM
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