I would suggest going to dell.com support, plugging in your service tag number and see what they have available in the form of the latest drivers available.
Hopefully Windows 8 or newer, but in a pinch if they only have windows 7 drivers you might try those.
Just make sure you're downloading and installing the correct driver for system architecture (32 or 64 bit)
Trouble said:
I would suggest going to dell.com support, plugging in your service tag number and see what they have available in the form of the latest drivers available.
Hopefully Windows 8 or newer, but in a pinch if they only have windows 7 drivers you might try those.
Just make sure you're downloading and installing the correct driver for system architecture (32 or 64 bit)
A good suggestion by Trouble. In fact, I had a friend whose wifi connection kept dropping randomly for no apparent reason; however, there were a few recurring event viewer logs that indicated the wireless network adapter was reporting capabilities that it actually didn't have. I think he told me it had something to do with coalescaling but I'm not sure. Anyway, further research indicated his adapter was using the latest driver installed from Windows Update. He fixed this issue by downloading and installing the Win 7 driver from his OEM website and that got rid of the associated event logs too.
BTW, the Win 7 driver was the latest available from the OEM website.