On 05/03/2013 08:14 AM, Bill Oliver wrote:

On Fri, 3 May 2013, Kevin Martin wrote:

On 05/03/13 07:29, Lawrence Graves wrote:

Lawrence,

If you replaced the card and then it worked I'm not sure how you can then report that the problem was not the card. Not only did you replace the card but then you also installed Fedora 18, thereby eliminating any chance at that time of knowing if your problem was hardware or software related. Have you tried reinstalling F19 Beta TC2 with the "working" card? Did it work/not work if you did? I'm not saying that it's not NM that's the problem but you need to debug things one step at a time to determine that.

Kevin

It may not be the card, but the driver. For some reason, I commonly have wifi problems with new Fedora releases, particularly on a Toshiba laptop I use -- I don't have the machine here and can't remember the NIC, but I think it uses a realtek driver of some sort. I make a report to bugzilla, and it sits there for a couple of months. Eventually I'll get an email saying "we upgraded the kernel -- did that fix it?" and it did. I tend to run Mint in the meantime.


billo
I agree with you, I believe it is the drivers too. I assumed it was the network manager because I am able to connect to my 2.4ghz wi-fi. Aren't the same drivers used to connect to 2.4ghz the drivers to connect to 5ghz.
--
All things are workable but don't all things work. Prov. 3:5 & 6
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to