Wi-Fi not touchable; froze my laptop












0















My laptop's hasn't been connecting to any wireless network. It's always disabled and I use a ethernet cable instead. However it did happen that I enabled the Wi-Fi; once I touched the turn-on button it froze my laptop. I can still turn it off, but it doesn't initialize anymore. My laptop boots like in 10s and then gets frozen in the booting screen.



However, I got into the Safe Mode automatically after restarting it several times. Safe Mode allows me to use cmd, so I wonder how could I disable the Wi-Fi to get Windows 10 running. Is there any netsh command to disable it even though I don't know my network device?



I did $ netsh interface show interface, but nothing's shown. It also says a auxiliar DLL WLANCFG.DLL can't be loaded. Should I use a pendrive to push such DLL to the shell location? $ netsh mode offline, still nothing.



So, according to @MarianD, there's nothing to do with cmd. Should I use another OS, then?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

    – MarianD
    Jan 23 at 9:50











  • @MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:08











  • My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:09






  • 2





    Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

    – harrymc
    Jan 23 at 11:29
















0















My laptop's hasn't been connecting to any wireless network. It's always disabled and I use a ethernet cable instead. However it did happen that I enabled the Wi-Fi; once I touched the turn-on button it froze my laptop. I can still turn it off, but it doesn't initialize anymore. My laptop boots like in 10s and then gets frozen in the booting screen.



However, I got into the Safe Mode automatically after restarting it several times. Safe Mode allows me to use cmd, so I wonder how could I disable the Wi-Fi to get Windows 10 running. Is there any netsh command to disable it even though I don't know my network device?



I did $ netsh interface show interface, but nothing's shown. It also says a auxiliar DLL WLANCFG.DLL can't be loaded. Should I use a pendrive to push such DLL to the shell location? $ netsh mode offline, still nothing.



So, according to @MarianD, there's nothing to do with cmd. Should I use another OS, then?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

    – MarianD
    Jan 23 at 9:50











  • @MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:08











  • My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:09






  • 2





    Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

    – harrymc
    Jan 23 at 11:29














0












0








0








My laptop's hasn't been connecting to any wireless network. It's always disabled and I use a ethernet cable instead. However it did happen that I enabled the Wi-Fi; once I touched the turn-on button it froze my laptop. I can still turn it off, but it doesn't initialize anymore. My laptop boots like in 10s and then gets frozen in the booting screen.



However, I got into the Safe Mode automatically after restarting it several times. Safe Mode allows me to use cmd, so I wonder how could I disable the Wi-Fi to get Windows 10 running. Is there any netsh command to disable it even though I don't know my network device?



I did $ netsh interface show interface, but nothing's shown. It also says a auxiliar DLL WLANCFG.DLL can't be loaded. Should I use a pendrive to push such DLL to the shell location? $ netsh mode offline, still nothing.



So, according to @MarianD, there's nothing to do with cmd. Should I use another OS, then?










share|improve this question
















My laptop's hasn't been connecting to any wireless network. It's always disabled and I use a ethernet cable instead. However it did happen that I enabled the Wi-Fi; once I touched the turn-on button it froze my laptop. I can still turn it off, but it doesn't initialize anymore. My laptop boots like in 10s and then gets frozen in the booting screen.



However, I got into the Safe Mode automatically after restarting it several times. Safe Mode allows me to use cmd, so I wonder how could I disable the Wi-Fi to get Windows 10 running. Is there any netsh command to disable it even though I don't know my network device?



I did $ netsh interface show interface, but nothing's shown. It also says a auxiliar DLL WLANCFG.DLL can't be loaded. Should I use a pendrive to push such DLL to the shell location? $ netsh mode offline, still nothing.



So, according to @MarianD, there's nothing to do with cmd. Should I use another OS, then?







windows-10 wireless-networking






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 23 at 9:56







hydroper

















asked Jan 23 at 9:37









hydroperhydroper

1267




1267








  • 1





    In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

    – MarianD
    Jan 23 at 9:50











  • @MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:08











  • My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:09






  • 2





    Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

    – harrymc
    Jan 23 at 11:29














  • 1





    In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

    – MarianD
    Jan 23 at 9:50











  • @MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:08











  • My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

    – hydroper
    Jan 23 at 10:09






  • 2





    Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

    – harrymc
    Jan 23 at 11:29








1




1





In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

– MarianD
Jan 23 at 9:50





In the Safe Mode are not loaded drivers and DLLs for working with networks.

– MarianD
Jan 23 at 9:50













@MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

– hydroper
Jan 23 at 10:08





@MarianD Now I were able to load DLLs within Safe Mode. I did netsh set mode offline, but not sure if this disabled the Wi-Fi.

– hydroper
Jan 23 at 10:08













My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

– hydroper
Jan 23 at 10:09





My Windows did now initialize, but only the cursor is there. I think I disabled something.

– hydroper
Jan 23 at 10:09




2




2





Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

– harrymc
Jan 23 at 11:29





Try to boot in Safe Mode with Network.

– harrymc
Jan 23 at 11:29










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I was able to stop the Wi-Fi forever-loop. Cmd wasn't the solution, it's simply Initialize in Safe Mode (don't choose Safe Mode with Network, nor the Safe Mode with Command Prompt (which'll only show cmd)).



If you did go with Initialize in Safe Mode with cmd and can't exit it anyway, then press Ctrl + Alt + Del and exit with Shift + Restart.



In Safe Mode desktop you don't have network. Manage devices and disable the Wireless there and you can get back to normal desktop mode by going to boot screen back (there in Advanced Options).






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    I was able to stop the Wi-Fi forever-loop. Cmd wasn't the solution, it's simply Initialize in Safe Mode (don't choose Safe Mode with Network, nor the Safe Mode with Command Prompt (which'll only show cmd)).



    If you did go with Initialize in Safe Mode with cmd and can't exit it anyway, then press Ctrl + Alt + Del and exit with Shift + Restart.



    In Safe Mode desktop you don't have network. Manage devices and disable the Wireless there and you can get back to normal desktop mode by going to boot screen back (there in Advanced Options).






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      I was able to stop the Wi-Fi forever-loop. Cmd wasn't the solution, it's simply Initialize in Safe Mode (don't choose Safe Mode with Network, nor the Safe Mode with Command Prompt (which'll only show cmd)).



      If you did go with Initialize in Safe Mode with cmd and can't exit it anyway, then press Ctrl + Alt + Del and exit with Shift + Restart.



      In Safe Mode desktop you don't have network. Manage devices and disable the Wireless there and you can get back to normal desktop mode by going to boot screen back (there in Advanced Options).






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        I was able to stop the Wi-Fi forever-loop. Cmd wasn't the solution, it's simply Initialize in Safe Mode (don't choose Safe Mode with Network, nor the Safe Mode with Command Prompt (which'll only show cmd)).



        If you did go with Initialize in Safe Mode with cmd and can't exit it anyway, then press Ctrl + Alt + Del and exit with Shift + Restart.



        In Safe Mode desktop you don't have network. Manage devices and disable the Wireless there and you can get back to normal desktop mode by going to boot screen back (there in Advanced Options).






        share|improve this answer













        I was able to stop the Wi-Fi forever-loop. Cmd wasn't the solution, it's simply Initialize in Safe Mode (don't choose Safe Mode with Network, nor the Safe Mode with Command Prompt (which'll only show cmd)).



        If you did go with Initialize in Safe Mode with cmd and can't exit it anyway, then press Ctrl + Alt + Del and exit with Shift + Restart.



        In Safe Mode desktop you don't have network. Manage devices and disable the Wireless there and you can get back to normal desktop mode by going to boot screen back (there in Advanced Options).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 23 at 11:41









        hydroperhydroper

        1267




        1267






























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