. Products certified by the Federal Communications Commission and Industry Canada will be distributed in the United States and Canada. Please visit the ASUS USA and ASUS Canada websites for information about locally available products. All specifications are subject to change without notice. Please check with your supplier for exact offers.
The ASUS PCI-N10 is a 802.111n Wireless PCI Adapter that delivers unrivaled wireless performance for your desktop or server backbone. With this adapter, you can easily upgrade your desktop PC wireless connectivity. The PCI-N10 Wireless-N PCI adapter provides wider compatibility, fitting with any standard 32-bit PCI slot. Problema con notebook Blue light ivia 2011. Lluvia o interferencia la cual al apagarla con el boton de encendido y volbiendola a prender se quita mi notebook es blue light ivia 2011 con.
Products may not be available in all markets. Specifications and features vary by model, and all images are illustrative. Please refer specification pages for full details. PCB color and bundled software versions are subject to change without notice.
Brand and product names mentioned are trademarks of their respective companies. Actual data throughput and WiFi coverage will vary from network conditions and environmental factors, including the volume of network traffic, building material and construction, and network overhead, result in lower actual data throughput and wireless coverage. Quoted network speeds and bandwidth based on current IEEE 802.11ac specifications.
![N10 N10](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125637658/976379619.jpg)
Actual performance may be affected by network and service provider factors, interface type, and other conditions. Connected devices must be 802.11ac-compatible for best results.
I have a HP Pavillion dv6810 and this morning it decided to turn off my wireless and not work at all. Spent a few hours looking online for a solution and didn't find anything greatly helpful, restored my default BIOS settings on the setup, uninstalled and reinstalled a million programmes and restarted about 12 times, very annoying. After having it off for about five hours I decided to uninstall HP Wireless Assistant and my Atheros WLAN Driver, though on your laptop this may be Broadcom, and then used the HP website to reinstall both programmes one at a time and suddenly it worked again. Not sure how but it did so i suggest trying that haha.
Hopefully it will still be working tomorrow! UPDATE: After reading the new messages that came in last night, I decided to try and uninstall the Wireless assistant software again. Take note that I had done this before!
I uninstalled it and then went to HP.com thru a wired connection, downloaded the lastest Broadcom driver and reinstalled it. Then I went to my control paneladd or remove programs and saw that the wireless assistant was there again (weird since I didn't reinstall it) and did a repair on it. This rebooted my computer and viola! The blue light was back and it was working again! Not sure what changed from doing this a couple weeks ago to yesterday, but it is resolved for now.
We'll see how long it will last! Thank you for all your input!
I have been having the exact same problem for around 6 months or more now, i eventually gave up on it, after lots of updating and tinkering around with it, sometimes i got it to work, sometimes not. I basically couldn't rely on it, so just bought a USB wifi stick, which has just failed on me. So i tried what you guys said, uninstalled HP wireless assistant and Broadcom driver. Rebooted, and i got a blue light! However my wifi switch if set to off which is strange, but it works nevertheless.
I have no idea how its working as I dont have the broadcom driver on my programs list. I had this same issue with my HP 530 laptop. I updated to Windows 7 in 2009 and everything worked fine. Then all the sudden, in 2013, the wireless blue button started to have a mind of its own and the wireless adapter would work only occassionally. HP's support people told me that it was a driver issue and that their drivers were not compatible with Windows 7, so I should go back to Vista or XP. That doesn't make sense because it worked fine with 7 for years before the issue arrose, so I tried numerous ideas to fix it. Eventually I found that the cover over the compartment on the bottom of the laptop, which allows access to the wireless card, had a metal/foil film on the inside facing towards the card.
I noticed that there were little dimples in the foil which lined up with the metal leads where the power wires attach to the wireless card. It turns out that if you ever rest your laptop on your knees or any uneven surface, or even if you grab the laptop in the wrong way, you may be pushing the foil on the cover into the leads and that causes the wireless card to essentially short itself.
The fix is incredibly simple. I found that if you cut a piece of cardboard from a standard cardboard box that is just as large as the wireless card, and place that piece of cardboard on top of the wireless card using a small piece of double-sided tape, the cardboard will act as an insulator/buffer between the foil on the cover and the leads to the wireless card. Therefore there's no short and the card works normally again!
I only hope that this solution saves you all a lot of time and money that I wasted trying drivers, wireless cards, operating system reinstalls, HP help desk, etc. After installign the cardboard, you may have to use the network troubleshooter (or do it manually) to restart the wireless card, but from then on it should work.