Most Intex 802.11n adapters use chipsets from (e.g., RTL8188, RTL8192) or Ralink (e.g., RT3070, RT5370). You can use generic drivers in a pinch:
Right-click on the device labeled or Intex Wireless LAN Card .
Do not skip this. A full restart ensures the driver service initializes correctly.
If the official site is unavailable, you can use trusted third-party driver repositories to find the 802.11n drivers, which are often based on Ralink/Realtek chipsets, such as Driver Scape . Step-by-Step Installation Guide Method 1: Using the Driver CD/DVD
:
Expand , right-click your 802.11n device, and select Update Driver .
Click the arrow next to to expand the list.
If your download only contains raw driver files ( .inf , .sys , .cat ), you must install it manually:
Select your Windows version:
dmesg | tail -n 50
Last updated: April 2026 Intex is a trademark of Intex Technologies (India) Ltd. This is an independent driver guide.
Once the driver is installed, you want maximum speed. Here’s how to optimize the adapter.
If the Intex website does not list your older model, go directly to the chipset developer. MediaTek and Realtek regularly update their generic 802.11n USB wireless drivers for Windows 10 and Windows 11. Downloading the generic driver for your specific chipset family (like Realtek RTL8188) will fully enable the device. 3. Windows Update Catalogue