

- #ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 HOW TO#
- #ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 INSTALL#
- #ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 ZIP FILE#
(* and actually much lower - found extremely sensitive to physical position) The Bad news - compared to the internal adapter the measured download speed (using a browser speedtest) is only about 7Mbps* vs 40Mbps
#ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 INSTALL#
The Good news - that install completes and sees the USB adapter and allows it to connect to my router So I went back to the Realtek package and install I indicated in the original post from the rtl8812AU_8821AU_linux-master package: Ultimately I ended up completely re-installing Mint It went through a long process in Terminal and eventually just stopped:Īfter, not only was it not recognizing the new adapter, it completely corrupted my file system.Įven opening the 'home' folder it was just completely blank & would lock Now - there was an install.sh file in there which should have been straight forward with a. So after unpacking the second zip made more sense
#ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 ZIP FILE#
Then I found that the unzipped folder actually contained another zip file which required to be unpacked

#ASUS USB AC56 NOT WORKING WINDOWS 10 HOW TO#
OK - worked out the issue with the Asus download driver:Īfter unzipping I had a folder that I had presumed to be an install package - but could not figure out how to load it So that guide suggests to use either the proprietary edimax driver or the open source item also linked. So expect to load this via the terminal - but what commands do I need?Īpparently uses same chipset as the Asus adapter I thought somehow could use the Driver Manager but that content is just blank I downloaded the Asus proprietary driver package for Linux from here but not clear on how to actually install this. This question relates to loading Proprietary driver package, in this case for an Asus AC56 USB Wireless Adapter (which I believe is Realtek based - apparently 8812au driver) Much of Mint is very intuitive - great job!īut as said still very much a rookie when working in the Terminal I'm doing my 'learning' on a notebook, in advance of building an HTPC and plan to use this platform. Hello - newbie here - quite a rookie with Linux in general but after initially trying cinnamon over Ubuntu, I like the way it 'feels' and installed complete Mint 16 Petra package.
