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08-09-2017, 08:38 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-14-2017, 07:16 PM by pingball57.)
Hi, expanding on my intro post. I recent bought an Acer aspire one KAV60, formerly from a school, with Win 7 installed. Wifi worked. I installed Linuxlite 3.4 (32bit) from live USB, getting rid of Win7. NOw I have no wifi, clicking on icon I only get enable networking (tickbox), VPN connections & edit connections. The wifi indicator light on the front panel is off and the switch on the front edge of the machine has no effect. To repeat wifi worked fine with win7. I've not had do stuff like this before so haven't a clue what to do next except ask here. Anyone ?
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Consider going to Install Drivers (Menu -> Settings -> Install Drivers).
Also consider copying and pasting this into a terminal and posting the results to the forum.
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08-12-2017, 09:28 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-12-2017, 09:32 PM by pingball57.)
Hi. Thanks for the reply. Are your intsructions about copyimg & pasting a jest? The acer has no wifi = no internet conection. I'm on my HP.
I've run the code anyway. I'm assumng you wanted the network info which is:
card-1: Broardcom BCM4312 802.11b/g LP-PHY Driver: b43-pci-bridge
IF: n/a state: n/a mac: n/a
card-2: Qualcomm Atheros AR8132 Fast Ethernet Driver: ath1c
IF: enp3s0 State: down mac: 70:5a:b6:04:0e:07
Also the M/c details are: Acer Aspire one. Mod.no. KAV60 (V: V1.29)
I tried to get this post in the right place said I'd be doing so in my intro post but peopleseem to have missed that bit, so I've got replies there as well. Computers & I don't seem to mix well...
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08-13-2017, 11:21 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-13-2017, 11:26 AM by torreydale.)
no modem = no internet
Wi-Fi tech was more than likely invented after we had wired/physical connections.
I have Broadcom as well. And I use a wired connection when installing until I can get to the Install Drivers utility after the first reboot. Then I can use the Broadcom wireless adapter for Wi-Fi.
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Torreydale: You're post should get mentioned a lot. That is something I ALWAYS do. When installing a Linux OS I always used a wired ethernet connection, even if the computer has wi-fi. Many a time I've booted a live disk, have internet via LAN, but the little wi-fi light isn't on. At least with an internet connection you can troubleshoot. I've been noticing that many new computers no longer have ethernet ports, or VGA ports. Most new laptops are HDMI only.
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Greetings,
For the number of Linux OSs I've played with, I have discovered the Netgear adapters have been found on all installs. All other types I do what Jerry said. My favorite Netgear adapter is the WNA1000M series. Give N range and allows me to work the setup of any other adapters. As I do not have ethernet capability at my home, I've found a work-around
BarryVG
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08-13-2017, 03:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-13-2017, 04:04 PM by trinidad.)
Okay. This is getting really disjointed. Identifying your hardware before installing is the easiest way. The broadcom binary blobs are the same for Deb. Download the Deb package and save it as a Deb package to a separate USB in advance. The LL installer will often find it if you are installing from DVD or if you have two USB ports. If it doesn't you can still find it from LL afterwards on the USB. Pre-seeding Deb packages of firmware blobs is something we should add to the help manual, and an instruction on how to identify hardware on running Windows systems prior to Linux installs. I believe the bcm wifi support for this particular card has been in LL for a while, since late 2.8 or 3.0 in my experience. I'm betting that it was available to this questioner during installation and he/she simply opted not to connect, and the system info posted seems to be currently configured to attempt a wired connection. Also many many Netgear adapters are not compatible except through ndiswrapper. This particular questioner should also check the BIOS to make sure wifi is enabled and which key will enable it as this could also be a keyboard recognition issue. Also broadcom support in RHEL is very extensive. If there is no Deb available there is often RPM for OEM installations, and contrary to popular opinion they (being binary blobs) are installable via the terminal in Deb without alien and come with installation instructions.
TC
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.