The weird thing is that it seems to be working? Either I misdiagnosed the problem, or maybe my old one was just broken.
Driver issues then. Find GPL coder and ask them to fix the driver
I am trying to install Private Internet Access (a VPN) on my laptop after transitioning to Linux mint on it and it won’t work. I downloaded the Linux version of the file from the site.
I will get the actual message later once I boot it back up.
This weekend I am fully ready to install Linux mint on my desktop.
As someone that spent a lot of years sitting next to an IT help desk, I’m not sure any chipsets work well at all. A lot of times you just have to figure out what makes them happy and get used to it.
I’d hear things like “as long as I don’t close my laptop after I undock, i don’t have to reboot to fix the wifi” as the person waddled across the office propping their laptop open. And these were high end windows laptops.
If you want to save troubleshooting time, just skip straight to the blood sacrifice. Computers are happy when you bleed, for some reason.
Check h-node next time ;).
starring this comment, amazing resource from the FSF - thank you!
inb4 Ubuntu added a kernel patch to improve support and didn’t contribute it upstream.
The Teacher in me has to ask,“So, what have we learned from all this?”
big exaggerated sigh
“…aaalways read the hardware specs, Mr. Bluewing, sir.”
And my wish is granted! This is the dawn of a new golden age for Linux memes!
Tienes que poner el locale en español. Ese es el truco.
I bought a cheap wifi card and it worked instantly after installing it. Linux really fell off, huh?
😂 time to build your Linux from source!
Could be flashed with a different microcode that works better with Linux. Just because it’s of the same model doesn’t mean it’s the same. Sometimes it’s as little as a flag that is set. Looking at you battleye
After both the 4G modem and the wifi dongles didn’t work I decided to flash an old TP-link router with OpenWRT (or was it DDWRT?) and using that in a bridge mode connected wifi and via ethernet to the PC. So yeah, then I got an Intel wifi 6 NIC and gave the router away.
Hah, I’ve totally done that. I’m thinking about doing it again, because it worked way better than my desktops built-in wifi adapter that has no external antenna.
I’ve done that before, most reliable wifi connection I’ve ever had.
My first Linux issue was that it didn’t support the USB hub I had at the time that was just always plugged into the windows machine I was installing Linux onto. So in 2003, I took my bulky tower to a friends house and it booted on the first try after weeks of failures trying on my own at home.
I was both relieved, and incredibly annoyed.As far as first problems with Linux go, that one’s a classic! Congrats, LOL
You will learn SO MUCH about computers by just trying to make your wifi or some other thing work. And then you will never have trouble with that thing again. I remember having to do wrapping of drivers, but I don’t know if that is still a thing.
Networking is wild. I’ve learned the Linux network stack by troubleshooting my Proxmox LXC + tailscale subnet router shit.
This is my jam. I really enjoy having a steep hill to climb.
This is how getting unsupported features work in linux feels
Like that time I got a random no-name action cam’s webcam mode to work on Linux by manually mounting it within seconds of connecting it
write us the driver to mount it within seconds of connecting it automatically.
There’s something special about WiFi, but it is better than it used to be. I think it depends on your hardware more than anything. Any chance you can connect up to Ethernet in the meantime? You may be able to plug directly into a switch/router.
It’s too far from the router right now, but I have some options.
I needed to have the new adapter plugged in to use a tool from the manufacturer that is supposed to detect your adapter and install the most up to date driver for you, but of course you have to be online, so I was using the old semi-broken adapter and had both plugged in and connected to my router at the same time.
It seems jank, but it made me wonder what would happen if I just left both connected forever. Would it stay seamlessly connected as long as they both don’t drop at the same time? Lol
You remind me of when I moved to Argentina. I had a laptop whose fan suddenly froze but I was too broke to get a computer so I figured out that if I put it in JUST THE RIGHT spot next to a fan, it would get enough passive cooling to work. Then I did the silly and decided to upgrade, which made me have to plug in Ethernet. It took me ages to get the computer back in the right spot so that it wouldn’t power off due to overheating. All for WiFi…
Amazing. There’s a level of stubborn ingenuity that I can appreciate.
You can make Linux load balance over two network connectors, but usually it prioritizes one network adapter for all traffic based on a scoring algorithms (wired and high bandwidth gets most points).
You can manually set a priority too, or route specific traffic (based either on destination, protocol, or source program, etc) to a specific adapter. Some programs (like KTorrent) are capable of using multiple adapters without any specific config (which is why I was able to run torrents one time while literally nothing else worked with an old 3G internet dongle) .
This would be a really interesting rabbit hole to go down…
I did it once because I had an unstable cable connection, it was surprisingly easy***(for me) https://www.baeldung.com/linux/merge-several-internet-connections