On 09/09/12 20:46, Wolfgang wrote:
Hi
I access the internet using Ubuntu 12-4, one of four distributions
currently installed on my machine. All other distributions I
regard as "experimental" until I become comfortable with them.
Wheezy and sneeze are the two distros are installed but cannot
currently access the internet, only because afaik the drivers for
my wireless network are not installed. My fourth distro, Mandriva
11.4, is rather dated, for it I cannot get the necessary drivers.
I have also tried the newest Suse and Mageia offerings, they
install well, including wireless network - but forget that they
have the right drivers installed the moment the installation disk
is removed. This is a kernel issue, the daemon supposed to
activate the drivers on system-start does not do its job; and it
is beyond my knowledge to modprobe the workarounds. It will only
be meaningfully fixed from 3.4 kernels onward, 8-12 months from
now.
Debian in their zeal for FOSS purity has removed non-free software
from their installation disks, starting with squeeze. Unless I can
learn how to circumvent that, I am stuck.
Alternatively, if Ubuntu will install properly, you could persist
with that. As I said before, Ubuntu's default choice of Unity does
not limit you to only using Unity - you are free to install any of
the Ubuntu variants: kubuntu (kde), xubuntu (xfce), lubuntu (lxde).
These are installable either as full distro iso installers, or by
installing the appropriate -desktop package (eg, lubuntu-desktop) on
an already installed ubuntu system.