On Thu 15 Dec 2011 at 06:57:55 -0800, kei...@strucktower.com wrote:
> Yes, it only hangs when there is a stanza referring to it in the /e/n/i.
Commenting out 'auto wlan0' in /e/n/i means the interfaces file will not
be used during booting. You should end up with a responsive machine.
What happens
Hi Brian-
Yes, it only hangs when there is a stanza referring to it in the /e/n/i.
I don't see anything in dmesg or /var/log/syslog from wpa_suplicant.
Thanks,
Keith
> An optimistic search might lead you to the pessimistic view that this
> card and Debian do not get on together, so it might be
Hi Wayne-
Funny I had not thought of this. After googling for an hour I had not even
seen anyone else mention firmware regarding this particular card.
However, looking at the firmware-realtek package, it does not refer to my
card's chipset- neither rtl8180 nor rtl8185 nor rtl8225 (my card is the
On Wed 14 Dec 2011 at 12:27:43 -0800, kei...@strucktower.com wrote:
> I have an old Dell server onto which I have just loaded debian for dual
> boot with windows xp. No gui- all console. The wireless PCI nic card is a
> TP-Link TL-WN353G (NOT the wn353gd). Works fine with xp. Uses the realtek
> dr
On 12/14/2011 03:27 PM, kei...@strucktower.com wrote:
I have an old Dell server onto which I have just loaded debian for dual
boot with windows xp. No gui- all console. The wireless PCI nic card is a
TP-Link TL-WN353G (NOT the wn353gd). Works fine with xp. Uses the realtek
driver included in the
I have an old Dell server onto which I have just loaded debian for dual
boot with windows xp. No gui- all console. The wireless PCI nic card is a
TP-Link TL-WN353G (NOT the wn353gd). Works fine with xp. Uses the realtek
driver included in the tree for recent debian releases and seems to be
recogniz
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