It’s a bad Wi-Fi card. Fedora is fine. I’d recommend swapping the Wi-Fi card for an Intel AX210, which is less than $20. There’s a guide for doing that here:
There are a few other posts about this issue:
Which OS (Operating System)? Fedora Workstation
Which release of your OS (Operating System / Windows 10, 11)? (if you are having a Linux related issue, please create your thread under the Linux subcategory) 42 (x86_64)
Which Framework product: Laptop 13", AMD AI 300 Series
Issues so far:
Cannot get WiFi speeds above ~100kb/s or basically unusable WiFi. Disabling power-savings brought speeds up from ~60-80kb/s to ~100-300kb/s. I’ve tried 2.4G and 5G APs
Plugging the laptop into a CalDigit USB…
Which Linux distro are you using? Arch (up to date)
Which kernel are you using? 6.14.4.arch1-1
Which BIOS version are you using? 3.03
Which Framework Laptop 13 model are you using? AMD Ryzen™ AI 300 Series
Hi, I’ve just got the AI 300 and installed Arch on it, everything seems to work, a part connecting to my wifi extender.
I can connect to the main router to both the 2.4 and 5 ghz connections, but I also have a wifi extender that fails to connect / get the ip. I’ve tried changing the netw…
The good news, got my Ryzen AI HX 370 laptop yesterday. Put it all together, and got fedora 42 (my prefered OS) and windows (my secondary gaming OS) dual booting and working. Pretty simple process.
Bad news, 6ghz wifi (Unifi 7 Pro units) does not work well.
RZ717 doesn’t support 320mhz.. oh well
Basically won’t connect to 6ghz or when it does, it’s extremely unstable and dies within seconds.
I’ve tried a number of workarounds that seem to have worked with the older 616 adapters, but none h…
If you’re using the default Wi-Fi card that came with the laptop, you may want to consider switching to an Intel Wi-Fi card. I switched to the AX210 (an easy process) and it’s been far more reliable than the AMD one.
Here’s the guide to switch:
There are a few other threads that may be helpful: