Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 5th Oct 2011 20:36 UTC, submitted by zizban
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RE[4]: wpa_supplicant simply.... can't!
by Luposian on Sat 8th Oct 2011 06:37
in reply to "RE[3]: wpa_supplicant simply.... can't!"
"The Ethernet portion of my system works fine.
Totally unrelated - completely different hardware.
And the wifi portion shows up as a selectable option in the prefs, but it showing up doesn't mean it automatically works?
Interesting. I can't remember if my broadcom chip showed up or not prior to installation of the firmware. It may have, and simply failed to work.
So I still have to install a driver for it? Didn't realize that... will try what you suggested!
Not necessarily a driver, I misspoke. The firmwares. The firmware is what the driver loads onto the wifi chip before it can be used - basically it's the operating system that the wifi chip runs, and it doesn't come pre-installed. This is pretty much how every wifi chip works, and if you don't have the firmware, you're SOL.
Since the firmware is technically "software", and thus requires a license to distribute it, this produces a tricky situation for OS developers who want to provide drivers for the hardware. "
Ok, I installed the firmwares (using a Ethernet connection)and then it saw our wireless network, but couldn't connect to it, because the net_server crashed or something. Disconnected Ethernet, rebooted, and now it refuses to see our network (or any wifi network, period). Says "No network detected", in the prefs, again. Weird.
Any idea why?




Member since:
2006-01-26
Totally unrelated - completely different hardware.
Interesting. I can't remember if my broadcom chip showed up or not prior to installation of the firmware. It may have, and simply failed to work.
Not necessarily a driver, I misspoke. The firmwares. The firmware is what the driver loads onto the wifi chip before it can be used - basically it's the operating system that the wifi chip runs, and it doesn't come pre-installed. This is pretty much how every wifi chip works, and if you don't have the firmware, you're SOL.
Since the firmware is technically "software", and thus requires a license to distribute it, this produces a tricky situation for OS developers who want to provide drivers for the hardware.