On Tue, 04 Oct 2011 12:32:29 -0700, keitho wrote: >> On Mon, 03 Oct 2011 15:02:37 -0700, keitho wrote:
(...) >> BTW, the package which contains the applet is "network-manager-gnome" >> which you seem to have installed so you should be able to launch it by >> running "nm-applet --sm-disable". > Thank you for replying. > > It turns out that I did have the applet, but still could not connect. I > finally figured out that the problem was due to my misunderstanding the > difference between "managed" and "not managed"... I had inadvertently > left some configuration info in my /etc/network/interfaces file that was > interfering with the network-manager. After I removed the lines from the > interfaces file everything now works as expected. Great! :-) > Thank you again, you have been very helpful to me, and others on the > debian-users list, more than once. You're welcome. > I would also like to know how I can configure a console laptop (one with > no gui- CLI only) to access wireless in the same manner- automatic > detection of available wireless networks and a way to enter a key when > necessary. Can someone point me to a tutorial that would help me? Mmm, I think network manager can be also used from command line ("nmcli"), but I'm not sure about its full capabilities :-? (...) Look, this article may help, I think it points to almost all of the possibilities: *** Configure wireless network from the command line http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/21541/configure-wireless-network-from-the-command-line *** Another option could be avoiding NM to manage the wifi interface and manually set the required settings by means of "/etc/network/interfaces" in join with wpa_supplicant, but this method seems annoying for a "road warrior" configuration :-): http://wiki.debian.org/WiFi/HowToUse Greetings, -- Camaleón -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/pan.2011.10.05.14.13...@gmail.com