Linux wifi help :(

From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 2 Feb 2017 15:12
To: Matt 9 of 19
In theory, yeah, but figuring out what's compatible is too much hassle right now. (Plus it requires taking off keyboard and palmrest to do.)

With a USB one I just need a supported chipset?

EDITED: 2 Feb 2017 15:13 by BOUGHTONP
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 2 Feb 2017 15:15
To: Lucy (X3N0PH0N) 10 of 19
I spent several hours settings things up that I don't want to repeat - if it can be easily converted to Debian without taking ages and being confusing and creating a horrible hybrid then fine, but I suspect that route would be worse than re-setting up Debian from scratch.

A single bad firmwire isn't ideal but doesn't make it completely redundant - especially if it can be undone once I have time/inclination to swap the card over.

From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 2 Feb 2017 16:21
To: ANT_THOMAS 11 of 19

Half do, half don't object, and the point is identical bases.

I'm building the most free solution without sacrificing user friendliness whilst being constrained by time - if I'd discovered this sooner I probably would have looked for a different LTS distro that used the regular kernel, and it seems likely I'm going to have to waste the entire evening tonight repeating stuff I've already done. :(

From: ANT_THOMAS 3 Feb 2017 10:33
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 12 of 19
I guess that's the penalty you pay for not checking all hardware is compatible with the strict list. Are you able to use a regular kernel? Or does that just defeat the whole object and you may as well start from scratch with a well supported distro?
EDITED: 3 Feb 2017 10:40 by ANT_THOMAS
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 3 Feb 2017 12:36
To: ANT_THOMAS 13 of 19
I did check the hardware, and it was listed as Linux compatible, with no indication on wireless firmware being an issue. Whilst looking into Trisquel I either didn't see or didn't notice that all the people there using and recommending Thinkpads didn't use the default wireless card.

It was only on looking more into Linux-libre that I discovered it doesn't just remove non-free firmware, but actively refuses to load it even if you install it separately.

So I'm going with Debian - still got some more setup to do today, but not oversleeping like I usually do means I at least have a bit of time.

EDITED: 3 Feb 2017 12:36 by BOUGHTONP
From: ANT_THOMAS 3 Feb 2017 12:43
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 14 of 19
That's a bit shit, freedom should include being able to install whatever you want without being restricted to what some group of people say you should/shouldn't.
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 3 Feb 2017 13:51
To: ANT_THOMAS 15 of 19
Yep, goes against "The freedom to run the program as you wish, for any purpose" and "The freedom to ... change it so it does your computing as you wish"

No point arguing that though - they'd just say having the source code means you're free to modify it, (whilst insisting immediately that doing so would be the worst thing ever).

From: ANT_THOMAS 3 Feb 2017 16:11
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 16 of 19
I had a very quick search to see what support that distro had for Intel WiFi (obviously little or none), and the first few forum posts were just people getting angry for others linking to non-free proprietary firmwares. At which point I thought, I'm not Richard Stallman so I really don't care.
From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX) 3 Feb 2017 17:11
To: ANT_THOMAS 17 of 19
Richard cares so you don't have to.
From: ANT_THOMAS 3 Feb 2017 17:38
To: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX) 18 of 19
It's a massive weight off my penguin shoulders.
From: Lucy (X3N0PH0N) 3 Feb 2017 20:39
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 19 of 19
It's the nature of the beast though innit. If you want to be *100% certain* that there's nothing proprietary on your machine, then Trisquel is the right choice. Which means for the vast majority of people in the vast majority of situations, it's a terrible choice.

There are *plenty* of other distros (Debian's a good choice for a fairly hard-line but still sane approach to freeness).