In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
included?
*TimDaniels*
Printable View
In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
included?
*TimDaniels*
Timothy Daniels schreef:[color=blue]
> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
> included?
>
> *TimDaniels*
>
>[/color]
I have used WPA2 with 7.10 and 8.04 but I had to install wicd as network
manager to get it going.
Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=blue]
> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
> included?
>
> *TimDaniels*[/color]
Is WPA2 available and usable on your LiveCD copy of Ubuntu 8.10?
--
John
No Microsoft, Apple, AT&T, Intel, Novell, Trend Micro, nor Ford products were used in the preparation or transmission of this message.
The EULA sounds like it was written by a team of lawyers who want to tell me what I can't do. The GPL sounds like it was written by a human being, who wants me to know what I can do.
On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 08:23:36 +0100, Dirk T. Verbeek <dverbeek@xs4all.nl> wrote:[color=blue]
>Timothy Daniels schreef:[color=green]
>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>> included?
>>
>> *TimDaniels*
>>
>>[/color]
>I have used WPA2 with 7.10 and 8.04 but I had to install wicd as network
>manager to get it going.[/color]
I tried wicd and still couldn't get wep or wap working. I gave up and
reverted to ubuntu 8.0.4.
"John F. Morse" wrote:[color=blue]
> Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=green]
>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>> included?
>>
>> *TimDaniels*[/color]
>
>
> Is WPA2 available and usable on your LiveCD copy of Ubuntu 8.10?[/color]
I don't have the LiveCD. I posted the question because I'm
severely time-constrained. I'd transition to 8.10 if I could get WPA2
encryption or if Bluetooth connections could be made without resorting
to "sudo hidd --server --search" on the command line terminal.
But otherwise, if it ain't broke, I won't fix it.
*TimDaniels*
"Dirk T. Verbeek" wrote:[color=blue]
> Timothy Daniels schreef:[color=green]
>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>> included?
>>
>> *TimDaniels*[/color]
> I have used WPA2 with 7.10 and 8.04 but I had to install wicd as network
> manager to get it going.[/color]
That you were able to get WPA2 is encouraging.
Were there any special "tweaks" necessary for you to successfully install
and setup wicd?
*TimDaniels*
Timothy Daniels schreef:[color=blue]
> "Dirk T. Verbeek" wrote:[color=green]
>> Timothy Daniels schreef:[color=darkred]
>>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>>> included?
>>>
>>> *TimDaniels*[/color]
>> I have used WPA2 with 7.10 and 8.04 but I had to install wicd as network
>> manager to get it going.[/color]
>
> That you were able to get WPA2 is encouraging.
> Were there any special "tweaks" necessary for you to successfully install
> and setup wicd?
>
> *TimDaniels*
>
>[/color]
No, I first tried with the standard network manager of Kubuntu, I could
get a connection but it was never stable.
After a tip in this group I installed wicd and am very happy.
I do have wpasupplicant installed but I think it's part of the standard
install, could be wrong.
wicd uses by default wext as wpa supplicant for the build in Intel
Corporation PRO/Wireless 4965.
madwifi is used on a high power Ubiquity pmcia card I have .
Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=blue]
> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
> included?
>
> *TimDaniels*
>
>[/color]
Well I've posted this from a laptop with a Broadcom chipset connected to
a Netgear router using WPA2 - AES.
So, yeah it works.
--
Conor
I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't
looking good either. - Scott Adams
"Conor" wrote:[color=blue]
> Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=green]
>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>> included?
>>
>> *TimDaniels*[/color]
> Well I've posted this from a laptop with a Broadcom chipset connected to a
> Netgear router using WPA2 - AES.
>
> So, yeah it works.
>
> --
> Conor[/color]
I'm glad to hear you have success using a Broadcom chipset, as my
laptop has a Broadcom wireless chipset also.
Is your laptop running Ubuntu 8.10, and did you have to use wicd to
get WPA2-AES to work?
*TimDaniels*
On 2008-11-06, Timothy Daniels <SpamBucket@NoSpamPlease.biz> wrote:[color=blue]
> "John F. Morse" wrote:[color=green]
>> Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=darkred]
>>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>>> included?
>>>
>>> *TimDaniels*[/color]
>>
>>
>> Is WPA2 available and usable on your LiveCD copy of Ubuntu 8.10?[/color]
>
>
> I don't have the LiveCD. I posted the question because I'm
> severely time-constrained. I'd transition to 8.10 if I could get WPA2
> encryption or if Bluetooth connections could be made without resorting
> to "sudo hidd --server --search" on the command line terminal.
> But otherwise, if it ain't broke, I won't fix it.[/color]
For bluetooth, try blueman. It does a MUCH better job of utilizing
bluetooth devices from a gui. I had a bitch of a time getting
bluetooth headphones working on Gutsy using the standard bluetooth
utilities. When I installed blueman, they were up and running in
minutes.
--
Joe - Linux User #449481/Ubuntu User #19733
joe at hits - buffalo dot com
"Hate is baggage, life is too short to go around pissed off all the
time..." - Danny, American History X
"Joe" wrote:[color=blue]
> Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=green]
>> "John F. Morse" wrote:[color=darkred]
>>> Timothy Daniels wrote:
>>>> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista, and
>>>> Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to connect to
>>>> Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10, or is WPA2 now
>>>> included?
>>>>
>>>> *TimDaniels*
>>>
>>>
>>> Is WPA2 available and usable on your LiveCD copy of Ubuntu 8.10?[/color]
>>
>>
>> I don't have the LiveCD. I posted the question because I'm
>> severely time-constrained. I'd transition to 8.10 if I could get WPA2
>> encryption or if Bluetooth connections could be made without resorting
>> to "sudo hidd --server --search" on the command line terminal.
>> But otherwise, if it ain't broke, I won't fix it.[/color]
>
> For bluetooth, try blueman. It does a MUCH better job of utilizing
> bluetooth devices from a gui. I had a bitch of a time getting
> bluetooth headphones working on Gutsy using the standard bluetooth
> utilities. When I installed blueman, they were up and running in
> minutes.[/color]
Thanks for the tip.
*TimDaniels*
Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=blue]
> I'm glad to hear you have success using a Broadcom chipset, as my
> laptop has a Broadcom wireless chipset also.
> Is your laptop running Ubuntu 8.10, and did you have to use wicd to
> get WPA2-AES to work?
>[/color]
Running 8.10 and the default installed network-manager. No wicd here.
They've really sorted it. I plugged in my "3" USB dongle. It recognised
it and went off to get the drivers. It then ran a configuration wizard
and asked for the country I was in and then what mobile network. Compare
that to previous efforts which involved using an app someone wrote for
Vodafone and also having to disable USB automount.
--
Conor
I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't
looking good either. - Scott Adams
"Conor" wrote:[color=blue]
> Timothy Daniels wrote:[color=green]
>> I'm glad to hear you have success using a Broadcom chipset, as my
>> laptop has a Broadcom wireless chipset also.
>> Is your laptop running Ubuntu 8.10, and did you have to use wicd to
>> get WPA2-AES to work?
>>[/color]
> Running 8.10 and the default installed network-manager. No wicd here. They've
> really sorted it. I plugged in my "3" USB dongle. It recognised it and went
> off to get the drivers. It then ran a configuration wizard and asked for the
> country I was in and then what mobile network. Compare that to previous
> efforts which involved using an app someone wrote for Vodafone and also having
> to disable USB automount.[/color]
That sounds good. I live in a densely populated apartment/condo area,
and I'm a little uneasy with just WPA. I've read good things about wicd,
but I like to keep my installations as default and generic as possible.
*TimDaniels*
>>>>> "TD" == Timothy Daniels <SpamBucket@NoSpamPlease.biz> writes:
TD> In setting up my wireless router to connect with WinXP, Vista,
TD> and Ubuntu 7.10, I had to use WPA (not WPA2) in order to
TD> connect to Ubuntu. Is this still the case with Ubuntu 8.10,
TD> or is WPA2 now included?
I just installed XUbuntu 8.10 on an old Compaq Presario (clean
install, no dual boot) with a TP-Link cardbus wireless (atheros
chipset). Now using WPA2 with the default network manager, but flakey:
the password field is always replaced with a long string that might be
the passkey or who knows what. There are a couple of threads about it
on the ubuntu forums I'll pursue.
--
Everybody's worried about stopping terrorism. Well, there's a really
easy way; stop participating in it.
~ Noam Chomsky