Uninstall the device. Disable and enable the device. Changed the ethernet cable to one that is 100% working on different computers. The only other solutions that might work that I have not tried is a BIOS update and Windows System Restore, which is my last resort if there are no other options that might seem obvious.
Click Start > Settings > System > Projecting to this PC. Step 2. The Projecting to this PC screen appears. Click Optional features. Step 3. Click Add a feature. Step 4. The Add an optional feature page appears. Begin typing “wireless display”, and click the checkbox next to Wireless Display.
Go to Settings\Network & Internet and scroll to the bottom and run Network Reset. It will need to restart your computer (you dont need to wait, once you see the restart prompt, restart manually). Let us know how you get on. Cheers. gortallmighty • 4 yr. ago.
Show activity on this post. There isn't a standard way of knowing if a device supports WiFi-Direct but if you go to the command prompt and type in ipconfig /all and scroll around a bit you will see a device with the description of "Microsoft Wi-Fi Direct Virtual Adapter". If you see that then there will be support, but without testing it on a
each network adapter has a primary dns suffix, and the ability to add more, in order. you can see this in the advanced IPv4 settings on the DNS tab. for a client it means that DNS requests exiting that interface and that are not fully qualified will have the suffix appended.
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microsoft wifi direct virtual adapter windows 10 missing