
They tell me to select Start, then Settings > Network & Internet > Wifi to see the list of networks, but that’s not working. When I tried troubleshooting this morning, it says, “Troubleshooting couldn’t identify the problem.” I’ve gone to “Explore additional options” but none of the supports have worked. Last night when I right-clicked the WIFI icon in the taskbar it did the troubleshooting just fine and got my WIFI Network list back up so I could connect to my router just fine. My Dell XPS 12 was working normally and my connection to any wireless network was just fine till it randomly “turned off” the WIFI Networks option and started showing absolutely no possible networks for me to connect to when I know there are a ton. Scenario 1: WIFI Options Are Available, But Dell Is “Not Connected” And Won’t Troubleshoot To Find Networks Or Connect To WIFI At All So, let’s start with real user’s practical scenarios! Troubleshooting applies to all Windows 10 users including non-Dell users.


Today in this post we will troubleshoot Wifi issue and will get the Wi-Fi working on Windows 10. There are multiple reasons for the Wi-Fi not working. Overview: There is a high number of Windows 10 users who are facing no Wi-Fi issue.
