This is a Realtek 8188 (either revision of WN725N) card so it requires
non-free firmware to be loaded.
However, what you tried to compile is not a "driver". It's just a "(non-free)
firmware loader".
It is probable that the Wifi chipset in this adapter requires a proprietary
firmware. 'lsusb', executed in terminal while the adapter is plugged in
would identify the chipset. Trissquel's krenels do not ship with proprietary
firmware, contrary to Ubuntu's.
Can you boot the previous kernels? GRUB should still list it in its
"Advanced options for Trisquel" (or something like that).
Hey guys I’m on Trisquel 8 64bit, trying to make this usb wifi dongle I
just bought work:
https://www.tp-link.com/it/home-networking/adapter/tl-wn725n/
It has linux drivers for download on that page.
Following the pdf guide on how to compile the drivers i use terminal to
navigate to the
"Abrowser Home (default)" is apparently blank, nowadays. You can specify a
customized Web page though. https://duckduckgo.com/html if what you actually
want is the text box to search DuckDuckGo.
may I contextually remove, always via terminal, the old kernel before
rebooting
That would be a bad idea: if, for some reason, the newer kernel does not
boot, you could not boot the older one.
will I encounter other problems?
The problem should not have happened in the first place. It
Hi to everyone.
I have installed and I'm using usually Abrowser in Trisquel 8 mini on my
desktopo computer and I would like to know why I'm receiving always a blank
page of Abrowser when I open a new window, even if I selected in the tab
Abrowser Home (default). Is it possible an image like
Hi to everyone.
I'm using Trisquel mini on the HP 510, and old 32 bit notebook. After a
general updating and a reboot with the latest linux kernel 4.4.0-178 I had on
the screen the following response by GRUB: " Minimal BASH-like line editing
is supported. For the first word, TAB lists
About my playing with the end-of-line character (\n) ...
Applying nMap's grepable-output function, as in this script:
sort TestGrepOutnMapNine.txt |
sudo nmap -Pn -sn -T4 --max-retries 16 --script asn-query -iL '-' -oG - |
grep "Host:" '-' > TestGrepOutnMapNineGrep.txt
eliminates the blank lines
> restart stopped the process.
Indeed, "disable" is only effective after restart, I should have mentioned
it.
The "start", "stop" and "restart" commands are usually what you are looking
for if you need an immediate, but not permanent effect.
You might use "stop" then "disable" if you
Thanks for your suggestion.
running "systemctl status bluetooth" yields:
bluetooth.service - Bluetooth service
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service; enabled; vendor
preset
Active: inactive (dead)
Docs: man:bluetoothd(8)
after "sudo systemctl disable
new login didn't help.
restart stopped the process.
and as to explain the difference between 100 % and 25 %: It was 1 out of 4
CPUs konstantly running at 100 %!
If it will happen again, I will see.
I wonder why there isn't a bluetooth control in the system settings.
Thanks for your help.
>> I personally value the freedom to choose what the software I use does, for
instance the freedom to turn off any Sync-like functions in my browser.
Abrowser already ships with that freedom, so I'm fine with it.
> By this logic, the Amazon lens spyware shipped in Ubuntu was not a problem,
>> Is it a good idea to limit the packages that will be manageable through a
package manager?
> Synaptic is not a package manager. It is a graphical front-end for the Apt
package manager.
I confess that the subtle nuance you seem to establish between an Apt-based
GUI package manager and
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