On Wed, 17 Sep 2014 21:51:02 +0300
softwatt wrote:
> That's also understandable, hardware is a pain in the neck. :)
That's a bit overestimated, I remember those days when not adding
the right switche(s) to a module left the HW as good as dead
(especially TV cards, it was a real PITA: tuner type
That's also understandable, hardware is a pain in the neck. :)
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On Wed 17 Sep 2014 at 19:46:21 +0300, softwatt wrote:
> On 09/17/2014 07:43 PM, Brian wrote:
> > Resolve the situation of not having any functional WiFi? Purchase a USB
> > device which does work with Debian. Normal working can then be easily
> > achieved.
>
> I already do that. But some things h
On 09/17/2014 07:43 PM, Brian wrote:
> Resolve the situation of not having any functional WiFi? Purchase a USB
> device which does work with Debian. Normal working can then be easily
> achieved.
I already do that. But some things have the so-called "hacking value". I
want to fix this for the sake
On Wed 17 Sep 2014 at 19:01:59 +0300, softwatt wrote:
> I recently bought a Lenovo Thinkpad T440P. The wireless driver did work
> out of the box. It was not even recognized by the system. A quick search
> revealed I am not the only one with the issue. I later learned that the
> Wireless adapter re
On 09/17/2014 07:09 PM, B wrote:
> By default, NM doesn't manage any I/F that is cited
> into /etc/network/interfaces; so you must either comment lines
> in this file or enable the management of these I/F into NM
> conf file.
>
Thanks! It's working surprisingly well.
I will test it before con
On Wed, 17 Sep 2014 19:01:59 +0300
softwatt wrote:
> So, I cloned the repo, compiled and installed.
> Now, network-manager does detect the adapter, but it says "device not
> managed". If i run `iwconfig` in a terminal, the device appears as
> "managed". The device is not detected by `ifconfig`.
I recently bought a Lenovo Thinkpad T440P. The wireless driver did work
out of the box. It was not even recognized by the system. A quick search
revealed I am not the only one with the issue. I later learned that the
Wireless adapter requires a driver called RTL8192EE, which is not
supported by Lin
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 09:43:59PM -0400, Jacob Tennant wrote:
> Please describe what you are meaning about the b43/ssb modules or wl option as
> I don't understand what you are meaning. I am running Debian without Gnome,
> KDE, etc...
>
Oops! :) The b43 module depends on the ssb module, that's
[Please don't top post.]
On Sun, 14 Mar 2010 21:43:59 -0400
Jacob Tennant wrote:
> Please describe what you are meaning about the b43/ssb modules or wl option
> as I don't understand what you are meaning. I am running Debian without
> Gnome, KDE, etc...
http://wiki.debian.org/bcm43xx
Celejar
I give up, I HAVE TO HAVE A DESKTOP!!! Installing KDE as we speak...
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 9:43 PM, Jacob Tennant wrote:
> Please describe what you are meaning about the b43/ssb modules or wl option
> as I don't understand what you are meaning. I am running Debian without
> Gnome, KDE, etc...
Please describe what you are meaning about the b43/ssb modules or wl option
as I don't understand what you are meaning. I am running Debian without
Gnome, KDE, etc...
Jacob Tennant
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 8:49 PM, Omar Campagne wrote:
> > Does Debian have driver support for the Braodcom 4311 c
> Does Debian have driver support for the Braodcom 4311 chips in laptops
> wireless
> cards?
>
I own a laptop sold with a 4311 (yet lspci gives 4312).
Anyway, you have the b43/ssb modules option with firmware, or
the wl option, available with the packages broadcom-sta-common
and broadcom-sta-so
On 2010-03-14 18:04, Jacob Tennant wrote:
I have not used Debian in over 10 years so please excuse my newbie type
qestions...
Does Debian have driver support for the Braodcom 4311 chips in laptops
wireless cards?
According to Google (linux broadcom 4311), the relevant driver was
added to the
I have not used Debian in over 10 years so please excuse my newbie type
qestions...
Does Debian have driver support for the Braodcom 4311 chips in laptops
wireless cards?
I am tryng to setup a server type system for amateur radio using Xastir and
tired of fighting with all of the GUI stuff, just
Don't top post and keep replies to the list. I've reorganized your
post.
On Mon, Jan 14, 2008 at 10:19:51AM -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> --- "Douglas A. Tutty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escreveu:
> > On Sun, Jan 13, 2008 at 07:13:35PM -0800, Eduardo B. V. Pereira wrote:
> > > I would like to know i
On Thu, 2006-08-17 at 22:40 +0300, Margiolas Christos wrote:
>
>
> but the winmodem driver is not open source software so it's against
> to the debian policy
> Christos
Ubuntu is also particularly pedantic in this regard.
You may be able to use the Ubuntu kernel packages on the deb
On Thursday 17 August 2006 20:59, Anthony Simonelli wrote:
> That's what I'm trying to figure out. Are the
> closed-source drivers for these devices compiled into
> Ubuntu or FreeSpire's kernels? If so, how is it done?
>
> How does Ubuntu get away with using them in their
> Kernel and yet remain
That's what I'm trying to figure out. Are the
closed-source drivers for these devices compiled into
Ubuntu or FreeSpire's kernels? If so, how is it done?
How does Ubuntu get away with using them in their
Kernel and yet remain free without any EULA? I know
that (Lin)FreeSpire require you to acce
but the winmodem driver is not open source software so it's against to the debian policyChristos
On Thursday August 17, 2006 10:14 am, Anthony Simonelli wrote:
> I tried the new Ubuntu 6.06 on my laptop and it was
> able to detect and install the Linksys Realtek 8180
> drivers for my wireless b card right off the bat.
> Despite a well polished Gnome Desktop, I still
> preferred Debian and deci
I tried the new Ubuntu 6.06 on my laptop and it was
able to detect and install the Linksys Realtek 8180
drivers for my wireless b card right off the bat.
Despite a well polished Gnome Desktop, I still
preferred Debian and decided to use Debian Etch since
the release is only a few months away (I ho
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