Hello Everyone i am using fedora 13 in Laptop{ Aspire 4720z,intel pentium dual coreT2330,1.60Ghz,5.33MhzFSB,1MB,l2 cache, mobile intel graphic media Accelarator X3100,1GB DDR2,160 Gb HDD,802.11b/q WLAN,Bluetooth2.0+EDR. I am not able to start wifi on my laptop Can any body tell me which driver is require to start wifi and bluetooth.
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 2:06 PM, dharmendra pal dharmendrpal@gmail.comwrote:
Hello Everyone i am using fedora 13 in Laptop{ Aspire 4720z,intel pentium dual coreT2330,1.60Ghz,5.33MhzFSB,1MB,l2 cache, mobile intel graphic media Accelarator X3100,1GB DDR2,160 Gb HDD,802.11b/q WLAN,Bluetooth2.0+EDR. I am not able to start wifi on my laptop Can any body tell me which driver is require to start wifi and bluetooth. -- http://mm.glug-bom.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxers
Dear Dharmendra,
Most wifi chipsets nowadays should be autodetected by NetworkManager in F13. If however you have one of the newer 802.11 N series cards, you might have better luck with fedora 14. If you can attatch the output of the 'lspci' and the 'lspci -v' commands so that we can determine the exact wifi chipset in use. Some of the newer cards might also need some firmware that is also available via YUM on the base and/or rpmfusion repositories.
Regards R. K. Rajeev
On Monday 14 March 2011 06:51 PM, Rajeev R. K. wrote:
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 2:06 PM, dharmendra paldharmendrpal@gmail.comwrote:
Hello Everyone i am using fedora 13 in Laptop{ Aspire 4720z,intel pentium dual coreT2330,1.60Ghz,5.33MhzFSB,1MB,l2 cache, mobile intel graphic media Accelarator X3100,1GB DDR2,160 Gb HDD,802.11b/q WLAN,Bluetooth2.0+EDR. I am not able to start wifi on my laptop Can any body tell me which driver is require to start wifi and bluetooth. -- http://mm.glug-bom.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxers
Dear Dharmendra,
Most wifi chipsets nowadays should be autodetected by NetworkManager in F13. If however you have one of the newer 802.11 N series cards, you might have better luck with fedora 14. If you can attatch the output of the 'lspci' and the 'lspci -v' commands so that we can determine the exact wifi chipset in use. Some of the newer cards might also need some firmware that is also available via YUM on the base and/or rpmfusion repositories.
Like 'Hardware Drivers' Ubuntu, is there a GUI utility in Fedora to automatically download and install proprietary hardware drivers from the internet?
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 9:05 PM, Rony gnulinuxist@gmail.com wrote:
On Monday 14 March 2011 06:51 PM, Rajeev R. K. wrote:
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 2:06 PM, dharmendra pal<dharmendrpal@gmail.com wrote:
Hello Everyone i am using fedora 13 in Laptop{ Aspire 4720z,intel pentium dual coreT2330,1.60Ghz,5.33MhzFSB,1MB,l2 cache, mobile intel graphic media Accelarator X3100,1GB DDR2,160 Gb
HDD,802.11b/q
WLAN,Bluetooth2.0+EDR. I am not able to start wifi on my laptop Can any body tell me which driver is require to start wifi and
bluetooth.
Dear Dharmendra,
Most wifi chipsets nowadays should be autodetected by NetworkManager in
F13.
If however you have one of the newer 802.11 N series cards, you might
have
better luck with fedora 14. If you can attatch the output of the 'lspci'
and
the 'lspci -v' commands so that we can determine the exact wifi chipset
in
use. Some of the newer cards might also need some firmware that is also available via YUM on the base and/or rpmfusion repositories.
Like 'Hardware Drivers' Ubuntu, is there a GUI utility in Fedora to automatically download and install proprietary hardware drivers from the internet?
Sadly Rony, Fedora does not work that way. Since Fedora does not ship any proprietary code, you will have to depend on the external rpmfusion repository, going through the standard yum/packagekit interfaces. The good news is, at least on the wireless front, there are a vanishingly small number of cards that need proprietary-love(Thank embedded for that). From what i hear, he just has a variant of the intel 4965AGN, and should be working fine on f14.
Regards Rajeev
--
As a proper list etiquette... Please trim your replies. Post your replies below the relevant original text, leaving a line space. Do not re-use old messages to write new ones.
Regards,
Rony.