@sforshee - I'm trying to better understand the consequences of Ubuntu
currently having an "an old regulatory database version", as some
System76 customers are having WiFi problems when connecting to AC
routers with an Intel 7265 and `sudo iw reg set US` seems to fix their
issues.

In particular, should a regulatory domain be set automatically once the
database is updated? Currently I'm seeing the world-regulatory domain
(ie, not set), which seems to be an intersection of all domains and
means some band that could be used aren't (in the US anyway).

FYI, for anyone experiencing this problem, you can permanently set the
reg by editing /etc/default/crda like this, replacing US with your
country code:

# Set REGDOMAIN to a ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2 country code so that iw(8) may set
# the initial regulatory domain setting for IEEE 802.11 devices which operate
# on this system.
#
# Governments assert the right to regulate usage of radio spectrum within
# their respective territories so make sure you select a ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2
# country code suitable for your location or you may infringe on local
# legislature. See `/usr/share/zoneinfo/zone.tab' for a table of timezone
# descriptions containing ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2 country codes.

REGDOMAIN=US

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1437913

Title:
  8086:095b [Lenovo ThinkPad X250] Wifi unstable on vivid with Intel
  7265

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