Turns out it was a silly configuration issue. Both wicd and network-manager seem
to use wlan0 as the default interface, and for some reason the wireless
interface was eth1, switching to it solved the issue. On top of that the Fn+F5
key really isn't working, which just made things more confusing.
T
Alef Farah wrote:
> However, no APs are found at my place ...
Is there a hardware rf kill switch? My T60 has a slide switch in the
lower left.
There is also an "rfkill" package in Debian. It might help. Don't know.
Try this. Does it show any access points?
# iwlist wlan0 scan
Are you awa
Everything regarding networking and wireless is enabled on the BIOS.
That "built in user's guide" seems to be for Windows only. The PDFs
available for the X40 on another section of the website were also for
Windows. Nevertheless I did the analogue steps for Linux - basically
verifying if things ar
On Mon, 4 Aug 2014 22:51:49 -0300
Alef Farah wrote:
>Nothing is logged. Though Fn + other F keys (such as lowering screen
brightness, >which works) also don't trigger any log entry.
It's possible the key combo is being caught by the BIOS ... However,
even in that case, if the wireless interface
> Try:
> tail -f -n 150 /var/log/syslog
>
> And then press the Fn+F5 keys... what shows in the log?
Nothing is logged. Though Fn + other F keys (such as lowering screen brightness,
which works) also don't trigger any log entry.
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On Mon, 4 Aug 2014 19:47:45 -0400
Alef Farah wrote:
>Thinkpad does a single blink every
>~5s. Fn+F5, which should toggle the wi-fi, seems to have no effect
>whatsoever.
Try:
tail -f -n 150 /var/log/syslog
And then press the Fn+F5 keys... what shows in the log?
--Andrew
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