

- #WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER INSTALL#
- #WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER DRIVERS#
- #WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER UPDATE#
- #WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER DRIVER#
- #WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER BLUETOOTH#
This link in an ubuntu forum about Qualcomm atheros qca9377 dropping wifi contains script to restart wifi. So, have you tried completely shutting down the computer and cold booting into Linux? Or, from Linux, rebooting into Linux? Any pattern turn up that way? My theory was that Windows left the hardware in some screwy state that interfered with its proper operation in Linux, but powering down and back up would of course put the hardware back to normal. But if I completely powered down the computer and then turned it back on and booted to Linux, everything was fine. If I selected "Reboot" from Windows, some piece of hardware - it's been so long I can't remember which - wouldn't function properly.

I remember having a similar problem with a Windows/Linux dual boot. A lot of good information in the thread.Īn interesting comment I found in this thread on a Sound Issue not working which I think relates back to quick boot: Some of the key points are making sure to disable secure boot before booting into Mint and to make sure fast start (quick boot) up is disabled (so when you shut down Win10 it actually shuts completely down and does not just go into hibernation mode). There is on this forum a Installing Mint on a Windows 8/8.1/10 Computer.
#WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER UPDATE#
There was a BIOS update in late July and I presume you installed it. Here are some things I found in my research today. (I was under the impression that Win10 licenses were tied to the firmware, rather than the hard drive, but I could be wrong about that.) I don't have Win10, so there's nothing specific I can recommend to look for other maybe there's some type of power-savings setting?. You might want to check how the BIOS options are set to see if there's anything there which might be related. If I have time tomorrow I will do a few searches to see if I can find it. I think the Win10 installation changed a BIOS setting which had to be switched back and that fixed the issue? but I don't recall the specifics.

I seem to recall reading about others who were having problems in Mint that they were not having in Windows. Win10 just has to be king of the hill and installed first. The experience I've heard on this forum is that Win10 must be installed first if you want to have a Win10-linux dual boot. I tried all GitHub installation and followed suggestions posted in the Linux mint forum. During installation and after that WiFi not working in Linux only. Later I installed Linux mint alongside dual boot with win10. Then I freshly installed win10 only (washout all the exiting partition & os) to the latest version then I updated all the drivers, now it is working fine in win10.
#WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER DRIVERS#
After a week's time I installed Win10 (later I noticed, it was incompatible bversion), after installation, win10 destroyed all my internal drivers (graphic card, WiFi, Bluetooth, volume, screen brightness.etc).
#WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER INSTALL#
So, I decided to install Linux Mint only in new hard disk. My hard disk was corrupted (pre-installed Win10 & Debian) and I changed a new hard disk and lost my Win10 license.
#WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER DRIVER#
The driver information I found on GitHub (and on the Qualcomm site) requires using the code to build the drivers and it is several years old so I'm not sure it would work.
#WHAT IS THE QUALCOMM QCA9377 802.11AC WIRELESS ADAPTER BLUETOOTH#
There were some mentions of the possibility that bluetooth was interfering and trying turning off the bluetooth to get the wireless to work. I did searches last night and found results where some people were having problems getting WiFi with the card you have and for others it was working but slow speeds. Qualcomm QCA9377 802.Sun 8:35 pmNetwork: Device-1: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet vendor: Lenovoĭriver: r8169 v: kernel port: 3000 bus ID: 01:00.0 chip ID: 10ec:8168ĭevice-2: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9377 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter vendor: Lenovoĭriver: N/A port: 3000 bus ID: 02:00.0 chip ID: 168c:0042ĭevice-3: Ralink MT7601U Wireless Adapter type: USB driver: mt7601u bus ID: 1-1.1:3ĭevice-4: Qualcomm Atheros type: USB driver: btusb bus ID: 1-1.4:4 chip ID: 0cf3:e500 Or the other possibility is Device-4 is actually the bluetooth from the combo card and not USB and that error is somehow interfering. Qualcomm QCA9377 802.11ac Wireless Adapter *: 2K=Windows 2000, 2K3= Windows 2003, XP= Windows XP, VISTA = Windows Vista, WIN7 = Windows 7 Watch this video to see how it works - click here If your driver isn't working, use the driver having the same OEM with the your laptop/desktop brand name. If you are looking for an update, pickup the latest one. With the different devices, they can have the same driver, it's because they all use the same chip manufacturer. Below is a list of drivers that may be suitable for your device.
