OK,
I've just put 10.04 netbook edition on my eeePC 701SD. Surprise surprise, the
wireless doesn't work! I can see my wireless network, but when I try to connect
the icon indicates that it's trying, just never succeeds. I'm running WEP
shared
key (Iknow, I know... it's the lowest common
If memory servers me correctly I installed the linux-firmware-nonfree to get
the driver support for the kernel.
Cary
James Beake jamesbe...@moonmarsh.com wrote .. I've had a similar experience
with two netbooks (dell mini 9 and hp 1000). Honestly I can't say I did
anything to
I really should check my spelling before I post:-(
Cary
Cary Bielenberg c...@bielenberg.id.au wrote ..
If memory servers me correctly I installed the linux-firmware-nonfree to get
the driver support for the kernel.
Cary
James Beake jamesbe...@moonmarsh.com wrote ..
Greetings,
On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 3:26 PM, bwright bwright...@gmail.com wrote:
As we move towards restructuring our Loco and creating a more active
community I thought we could take at least some time to reconsider the
current projects page for our team see (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/
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On 19/05/10 15:56, bwright wrote:
As we move towards restructuring our Loco and creating a more active
community I thought we could take at least some time to reconsider the
current projects page for our team see (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/
On 19 May 2010 23:39, Mitch Towner mitch.towner.ubu...@gmail.com wrote:
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On 19/05/10 15:56, bwright wrote:
As we move towards restructuring our Loco and creating a more active
community I thought we could take at least some time to reconsider
Could you find out the model of wireless card which is really
important for diagnosing. Run the lspci you may have to do that as
root ( sudo lspci ) and that will pretty much just list all PCI
devices. If you see your wireless card on that list it is a really
good thing because it means the
Can we just back track a little...
When the Eee PC is powered up is the blue LED active? if not then the
wireless card has been disabled with the FN + F2 key combination. Also
as previously mentioned, double check the BIOS to ensure that the
wireless is enabled (default is not enabled)
As for
G'day Scott
Yep the blue light comes on, that's how I can see all the other networks.
Hardware seems to work OK, just won't authenticate.
If it's an Atheros chip, how come the kernel recognises it as Realtek? I wonder
if there was a chenge of chipset at some stage. This little monster has
The Realtek is the onboard LAN ;-)
Scott Evans VK7HSE
Phone: +61362291658
Mobile: +61417586157
Skype: vk7hse
sc...@vk7hse.hobby-site.org
http://www.vk7hse.hobby-site.org
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On Wed, 2010-05-19 at 23:37 +0100, Norm wrote:
Message: 6
Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 08:31:28 +1000
From: Norm, VK3XCI vk3...@aanet.com.au
Subject: Re: 701SD wireless
To: ubuntu-au@lists.ubuntu.com
Message-ID: 4bf466c0.7070...@aanet.com.au
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1;
Before clean install to Lucid Lynx on my PC, I recorded Gramps to CD
with a view to putting it on Lucid Lynx.When I put the Cd in, the file
comes under 'personal data' with the date the CD was recorded. The CD
shows the name of Gramps-desktop.
Now, when I try the transfer to Lucid, the
Hi...
My wife uses Gramps so I have a little knowledge that may shed some light
on your situation. Ok all your Gramps data is stored in a directory in
your home directory called .gramps Now notice the . prior to the name,
this means this is a hidden directory. So I'm hoping that when you did
your
On 20 May 2010 11:21, Scott Evans sc...@vk7hse.hobby-site.org wrote:
The Realtek is the onboard LAN ;-)
I have a 701SD, and AFAIK it runs the ath5k kernel module (used to be
madwifi back in the 8.04 days)
vk7hse is correct - the realtek is the onboard LAN. I usually disable
this in the bios
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