Steve Litt of Troubleshooters.Com wrote, On 03/08/2014 04:27 PM: > If I were in your shoes, the first thing I'd do is an orderly shutdown, > power down for 30 seconds, and power back up. You might get lucky and > have Wifi just work when it comes back up. I've seen stranger things > happen. ...
Also, after you follow the advice of others on this list to determine what kind of card you have, you may find that it's as simple as doing an install. When I first installed Debian on the laptop, the installer prompted me for a driver for my Intel Centrino wireless card, because it noticed that it didn't have a free driver. Of course, I didn't have installation medium available right then, so I just blew through it and determined that I would install it later. Once Debian was installed, I searched around and figured out that I needed to do this: 1. Edit /etc/apt/sources.list, adding " non-free" to the end of every line starting with "deb ". 2. Then: $ sudo apt-get upgrade $ sudo apt-get install firmware-realtek Of course, I don't recommend that you do exactly that, because it obviously depends on what kind of wireless card you have. I'm just encouraging you by showing you how simple it can be, once we figure out what you need to use in place of "realtek" there. -- Patrick -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/531b9c18.8000...@rayservers.net