7th Jul, 2016, 03:39 AM
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30th Aug, 2019, 03:34 PM
Wow, I have just installed 18.3 and I had the hardest time finding where to configure the wifi. I'm a complete newbie to this, but finally found the network eth0 had up and down carrots and needed to be changed to wlan0 and then I could scan for networks with my rpi3.
I think that could be made a little easier for the non-linux users.
I realize this is the wrong thread, but I can't post a new thread, yet and this is the closest I could find. Hopefully this helps someone else?
I think that could be made a little easier for the non-linux users.
(30th Aug, 2019 03:34 PM)redjeep0 Wrote: [ -> ]Wow, I have just installed 18.3 and I had the hardest time finding where to configure the wifi. I'm a complete newbie to this, but finally found the network eth0 had up and down carrots and needed to be changed to wlan0 and then I could scan for networks with my rpi3.
I think that could be made a little easier for the non-linux users.
I realize this is the wrong thread, but I can't post a new thread, yet and this is the closest I could find. Hopefully this helps someone else?
31st Aug, 2019, 04:18 AM
(30th Aug, 2019 03:34 PM)redjeep0 Wrote: [ -> ]Wow, I have just installed 18.3 and I had the hardest time finding where to configure the wifi. I'm a complete newbie to this, but finally found the network eth0 had up and down carrots and needed to be changed to wlan0 and then I could scan for networks with my rpi3.
I think that could be made a little easier for the non-linux users.
This has nothing to do with Linux.
Btw, there is a easy way to setup wlan before initial boot:
Prepare a wpa_supplicant.conf file and put it into the boot partition, as described for example here, Step 4. Add network info
That's it
Quote:
(30th Aug, 2019 03:34 PM)redjeep0 Wrote: [ -> ]Wow, I have just installed 18.3 and I had the hardest time finding where to configure the wifi. I'm a complete newbie to this, but finally found the network eth0 had up and down carrots and needed to be changed to wlan0 and then I could scan for networks with my rpi3.
I think that could be made a little easier for the non-linux users.
I realize this is the wrong thread, but I can't post a new thread, yet and this is the closest I could find. Hopefully this helps someone else?
Now you can create new threads
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