On 03/19/14 07:05, Luke Nath wrote:
> Strange ...
>
> I booted a fedora CD into rescue mode, opened a shell and ran fsck on /sdb2
> (the root partition of fedora, as sda1 is windows).
> It cleaned up lot's of unclaimed blocks.
>
> I rebooted fc20 into multiuser mode and lo and behold, wireless lan
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 11:28:58 +0800
From: ed.gres...@greshko.com
To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org
Subject: Re: fc20 wireless networking problem
On 03/18/14 11:13, Luke Nath wrote:
Upgraded from fc18 to fc20 using fedup.
Most went
On 03/18/14 11:13, Luke Nath wrote:
> Upgraded from fc18 to fc20 using fedup.
>
> Most went well. I had to restart the process because of a transient
> disk issue (Drive went to sleep).
> After that all was done and I rebooted. It booted into the fedup kernel
> to finish and complete the update.
>
Upgraded from fc18 to fc20 using fedup.
Most went well. I had to restart the process because of a transient
disk issue (Drive went to sleep).
After that all was done and I rebooted. It booted into the fedup kernel
to finish and complete the update.
After that I rebooted into the fc20 kernel.
Foun
On Sunday, 05 September, 2010 @20:16 zulu, Gerhard Magnus scribed:
> Here are the details of what worked (possibly of use to someone beside
> me with basic networking issues):
The reason I suggested using a LAN port on the D-Link,
instead of its WAN port, was in case you wanted the wired
and wire
Gerhard Magnus wrote:
My old DSL modem doesn't have a wireless interface. It's connected to a
router (the LAN gateway) which then has ethernet connections to my
boxes. All of these computers use static IP addresses. The DSL modem is
assigned a dynamic IP address by my ISP.
I recently added a DIR
In this case, you don't *have* to use the WAN/Internet port on the DIR-615
at all.
In the D-Link's web menu, SETUP on the top, NETWORK SETTINGS
on the left, the ROUTER SETTINGS section in the middle...
Set the Router IP Address to an unused IP in the same network of
your LAN. Check the Enable DNS
On 08/10/2010 07:28 AM, Gerhard Magnus wrote:
> The wireless router has an Internet --> WAN page in its setup that
> includes a choice of Internet Connection Types: (1) Dynamic IP (DHCP),
> which I can't use since the DSL modem has already taken the one IP
> address assigned by my ISP;
> (2) Stati
On 08/09/2010 04:28 PM, Gerhard Magnus wrote:
> I'm at my wits end trying to solve what I keep thinking is a simple
> problem.
>
> My old DSL modem doesn't have a wireless interface. It's connected to a
> router (the LAN gateway) which then has ethernet connections to my
> boxes. All of these com
On 08/09/2010 06:28 PM, Gerhard Magnus wrote:
> I'm at my wits end trying to solve what I keep thinking is a simple
> problem.
>
> My old DSL modem doesn't have a wireless interface. It's connected to a
> router (the LAN gateway) which then has ethernet connections to my
> boxes. All of these comp
I'm at my wits end trying to solve what I keep thinking is a simple
problem.
My old DSL modem doesn't have a wireless interface. It's connected to a
router (the LAN gateway) which then has ethernet connections to my
boxes. All of these computers use static IP addresses. The DSL modem is
assigned a
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