First post, by WinVistaIsNotBad
I have this Toshiba Satellite 1905 laptop i got a while ago. It came with an empty MiniPCI slot, WiFi antenna wires, physical switch on the side, and an indicator for WiFi on the panel, so naturally, i got a WiFi card for it (two actually, Intel PRO/Wireless 2100 and 2200BG, but they both behave in the exact same manner so i won't mention the second card).
However, it didn't work in WinXP or 2000 (recognised and driver installs, but no hotspots are found, XP tells me to ensure wifi switch is on)
Booting up Linux and running dmesg revealed this:
[ 32.491618] libipw: 802.11 data/management/control stack, git-1.1.13[ 32.491678] libipw: Copyright (C) 2004-2005 Intel Corporation <jketreno@linux.intel.com>[ 32.557207] ipw2100: Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 2100 Network Driver, git-1.2.2[ 32.557223] ipw2100: Copyright(c) 2003-2006 Intel Corporation[ 32.560668] ipw2100: Detected Intel PRO/Wireless 2100 Network Connection[ 32.658931] eth%d: Radio is disabled by RF switch.[ 32.671677] snd_intel8x0 0000:00:1f.5: intel8x0_measure_ac97_clock: measured 50882 usecs (2446 samples)[ 32.671691] snd_intel8x0 0000:00:1f.5: clocking to 48000[ 32.806229] ipw2100 0000:02:0b.0 wlp2s11: renamed from eth0...[ 35.544969] wlp2s11: Radio is disabled by RF switch.
rfkill too reports that WiFi is disabled by hardware.
I tried to flip the physical switch again and again, tried fn+f8 (since f8 has the wifi logo on it), checked the BIOS for any settings related to WiFi, reseated the card a few times, all to no avail. The aforementioned wireless indicator LED never lit up throughout all my testing.
I'm kind of lost now, could it be that the BIOS is somehow incompatible with those two cards? Could the switch simply be rusty from years of sitting in the off position? Or a third, more sinister option?
Any answers appreciated