I have a HP 530 laptop with Ubuntu 12.04 installed. With Windows Vista, I could use its wireless hardware, but now it doesn't work. I have tried using the command: sudo rfkill unblock all

Does anyone know what I should do?

Edit: I have a Broadcom wireless network card.

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lspci -vvnn | grep 14e4 Please post the output to the following command on the command line. – user206859 Oct 28 '13 at 9:43
    
Please run this command lspci -vvnn | grep 14e4 and edit your question with the results. – Warren Hill Oct 28 '13 at 10:25

I had the same problem when using a Broadcom Wireless card in 12.04. I connected the laptop to the internet via a wired connection and let Ubuntu install all the newest updates (see the update button in the launch bar).

After rebooting with all the updates installed, the wireless card suddenly worked!

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I just wanted to add, that I had the same problem. The Broadcom wireless card on my HP 530 notebook worked fine running Windows Vista, but when I upgraded to Ubuntu 12.04 it stayed dead. I installed the b43 kernel driver, which made wlan0 appear, but rfkill always showed the device to be hard blocked.

The wifi button didn't do anything, so I installed Windows 7, and the problem remained until I installed the HP Wireless Assistant utility from the HP site. This has an "enable" button after which the wifi button started working.

  • So I believe the HP 530 wifi button somehow needs software activation which is just not present in Ubuntu 12.04.
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I had the same problem and I did rfkill (rfkill unblock 0) it didn't do anything but I then disabled networking, re-enabled networking. And I then pressed the hardware button on the device. disabled and re-enabled networking again, It seemed to work since then this method works on every update (even 14.04 hope this helped!!

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I also have a HP 530 laptop and at first install wireless doesn't work. Just look for a wired or broadband connection and update and upgrade everything.

sudo apt-get update  
sudo apt-get upgrade

After that just open up dash and search for 'additional drivers' and install the proprietary drivers you will find there.

Mine is usually just one, for wireless: Broadcom Corporation: BCM4312 802.11b/g LP-PHY

Wireless should then start working. I have used Ubuntu on this computer from 10.10, 11.04, 12.04 and am now using 13.04, that procedure always works out for me.

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Uninstall the bcmwl-kernel-source package (if it is installed) by issuing the following command:

sudo apt-get remove bcmwl-kernel-source

Make sure that firmware-b43-installer and b43-fwcutter packages are installed (of course, you need to connect to the internet somehow for this or download it on some other computer and install it that way):

sudo apt-get install firmware-b43-installer b43-fwcutter 

Then, execute:

cat /etc/modprobe.d/* | egrep 'bcm'

If you see blacklist bcm43xx in the output, this approach may work for you.

Edit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf by putting # in front of the line: blacklist bcm43xx.

You may open the file for editing with e.g.:

gksudo gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf

After reboot, your wireless should work.

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