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In windows, most laptops these days have a hot-key to turn off wireless modules completely (i.e. airline mode), including WLAN and Bluetooth. I am currently on Ubuntu 11.10, and wondering as to what is the way to have the same effect, i.e. make sure that those modules are electrically off - not consuming any power, and the radio beacon is off.

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  • I believe hardware buttons work the same way in Ubuntu. Something like Fn-F5 or special "wifi" button etc.
    – Sergey
    Feb 16, 2012 at 5:12
  • The problem in my case is that the hardware buttons never worked. I am using a Compaq Presario CQ42 laptop, and never managed to find the scripts that'd get the hardware hot-keys to work. This means, I do not have screen backlight control, touchpad control, wireless control, volume control etc., any of it working ! :-(
    – bdutta74
    Feb 16, 2012 at 5:53
  • Well, from my experience the buttons usually do work out of the box - it must be something with Ubuntu on your particular laptop model. I'm just trying to clarify - your question sounds a bit too general.
    – Sergey
    Feb 16, 2012 at 6:40

2 Answers 2

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  1. Press F10 right after turning the laptop on to enter BIOS settings.
  2. Go to the "System Configuration" tab.
  3. Disable Action Keys.
  4. Save and Exit.

This should solve the problem. Now, when you press F1-12, It will activate the function (wireless, etc.). To access the F-keys normal functions ans function keys, press and hold Fn and then press the key. Hope that helps!

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  • Thanks. Part success, but I had to 'Enable Action Keys' in BIOS, not the other way around. Not sure if it was a typo, or I misunderstood. Now, I can at least see that the on-key LED change from White to Red and back. After enabling 'Action Keys' in BIOS, LCD backlight works, but screen-blanking, volume-control, and other music-control (which I actually have no use of), still don't work. Does it require some extra configuration or additional software to be installed ?
    – bdutta74
    Feb 16, 2012 at 6:44
  • Yep, typo. Sorry about that. As far as the volume and music controls. etc. Unfortunately, the volume and music controls are Windows functions that require Windows drivers. You can try looking at the configuration in System Settings -> Keyboard Shortcuts and seeing if it is possible to assign the keys. But, if it doesn't work there, your'e out of luck.
    – William
    Feb 16, 2012 at 20:06
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I use rfkill for this. Here's the online man page that gives you the package name and other miscellaneous data.

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  • Thanks. A "rfkill list" shows 3 interfaces -- hp-wifi (Wireless LAN), hp-bluetooth (Bluetooth), phy0 (Wireless LAN), and each one of them seems to be Soft-blocked:NO and Hard-blocked:YES. Wondering why it shows 2 Wireless LAN interfaces. I do not have any USB WiFi (additional WLAN) interfaces.
    – bdutta74
    Feb 16, 2012 at 8:02
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    It's weirdness with the hp wireless driver. My laptop does the same thing. I'm speculating, but hp-wireless could be the controls for the buttons that control wireless. phy0 is the raw card. Feb 16, 2012 at 18:01

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