Devon Harding wrote:
On Sat, Aug 23, 2008 at 12:58 PM, max <maximilianbianco@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Devon Harding wrote:
2008/8/23 Anne Wilson <cannewilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Saturday 23 August 2008 16:26:06 Devon Harding wrote:
On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 11:44 PM, Brian Powell <bpowell01@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Devon,
Make sure you have the wpa_supplicant package installed.
The wpa_supplicant package is installed (and the update). When I
select
my
wireless from the drop down list, it still asks for a WEP key instead of
a
WPA key.
Do I need the wpa_supplicant_gui package too?
I see the same behaviour on my EeePC. It does no harm, but it's
b******
annoying. (I presume that, like me, you can use the drop-down arrow to
select WPA then manually give it the passphrase?)
Anne
The thing is, WPA is not one of the choices. I only have the following:
WEP 128-bit Passphrase
WEP 40/128-bit Hexadecimal
WEP 40/128-bit ASCII
LEAP
Dynamic WEP (802.1x)
Have you tried an older kernel? I have seen some weird stuff with
wireless on the latest but it may be something else going on there.
What kind of wireless device are you working with?
--
Fortune favors the BOLD
--
I tried Ubuntu (Hardy) and got the same thing. If I choose 'Connect to
other wireless network' I do see the option for WPA, but it doesn't seems
to connect to my access point.
-Devon
But what wireless card are you using? I suspect your problem may be
there, its a possibility to explore anyway.
from a terminal as root:
root@localhost# lspci -v
it will produce a lot of output , look for the wireless device it should
be obviously labeled
--
Fortune favors the BOLD
--
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