Same behavior as originally reported, even with a USB startup disk I
created using 12.04 ISO image.

Steps followed this time:
1) boot with startup disk -> Try Ubuntu.

2) configure WiFi. /var/lib/rfkill/saved-state was not yet created.
Disable all radio using RF kill function key on physical keyboard.

3) reboot, once again select Try Ubuntu. Unity shell shows WiFi icon as 
disabled in the notification area. /var/lib/rfkill/saved-state was found with 
following contents
$ cat /var/lib/rfkill/saved-state
dell-wifi 1
dell-bluetooth 1
phy0 1
hci0 0

4) now press radio kill function key once again that was used in step 2
above. Expect that WiFi is now enabled; it is NOT. Press the key once
again. This time, WiFi is enabled that was configured in step 2 above.
Contents of /var/lib/rfkill/saved-state are still the same, assuming
they will be written to during shut-down to reflect transition from 1 to
0.

This is how it has ALWAYS worked for me: both before and with 12.04.

So, looks like while the /etc/init based mechanism seems to write the
state, the mechanism that is supposed to honor that is not working. Is
it working on your PC? I will be surprised.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/998602

Title:
  Radio kill function key needs to remember and honor the state from
  last shutdown

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