Wireless Troubleshooting Guide, how I love thee
Feb 12th, 2007 by jim
I’d like to give major props to the Ubuntu Wireless Troubleshooting Guide. I was out at a place with free wifi tonight, and I could see the access point via wifi-radar, but couldn’t connect to it.
I switched over to my laptop’s Win2k partition (booo . . .) to do some research, and found the aforementioned guide. After reading it, taking a few notes, and then switching back to my Xubuntu install, all it took was for me to issue two commands via the terminal, and I was connected to the AP. It didn’t even take me to the “Hey, you’re at this restaurant,” greeting page . . . just instant surfing.
I’ve saved the Wireless Troubleshooting Guide to my home folder, and will use it as a reference until I get more familiar with the commands. Having this handy reference also means that wifi-radar is coming off of my laptop. ![]()
Hi Jim,
I was googling for “xfce wireless” and your page was #4! I thought to myself, “this page looks familiar…” then realized it was yours!
- Ken
[...] For more extensive information on wireless troubleshooting, view Lisa Phifer’s expert response or check out SearchNetworking.com’s Wireless Troubleshooting Guide. Xfce’s Notes from the mousepad also mentions this Ubuntu Wireless Troubleshooting Guide. [...]