htnelson
Tue Mar 04, 2014 10:50:16 pm
This time my project was to replace win XP on laptops for older relatives who were facing windows XP end of support but had decent hardware for their purposes. They are all retired and primarily really only use the web browser on their computers. I wanted something that would represent the least adoption curve for them without spending $100+ on Win7.
First computer was 7 year old Dell laptop. Single core AMD 1GB memory.
Zorin 8.1. Both ran live and installed without issue except no wireless. Computer has the Broadcom chip (Dell 1390 pic wifi). Beautiful interface and the closest I have seen windows in the Linux stable so I believed this would work well for the older user.
Then I tried to get the wireless to work. Probably spent about 12 hours overall.
Installed Zorin 8.1 on hard drive as fresh install. It recognized everything except wifi. Wireless mouse worked, usb ports all worked. Great Ethernet wired connection.
Did my internet research.
Bios up to date. Wifi active in bios. Hotkey disabled.
1st went to ubuntu software repository and loaded Broadcom wifi driver package for the 4311 chip which I have. This did not enable wireless but did break the Ethernet connection. Only recourse was to reload the entire OS.
2nd used the windows driver install tool. Did not work because it said that ndiswrapper not installed. I was installed and only option was to remove it. I removed it and then it would not reinstall.
3d used terminal commands to remove existing drives and load drivers from Ubuntu repository. Still no wireless.
Repeated above with Zorin 6 and Zorin 8.1 edu. Same results. You can see where the 12 hours came in.
Then loaded a couple versions of Fedora 20. It recognized wifi but not wireless mouse or ethernet connection. I realized the fedora GUI would not work for the end users.
Loaded Lubuntu 13.1. It recognized wifi device but would not connect and OS froze requiring reboot.
How can this wonderful project come so close and still miss! I really want to like Linux but if it cannot address a problem as chronic (just do a web search of this issue) as this Broadcom chip issue widespread adoption will not occur. The end of support for XP represents an opportunity for linux to come to the desk top and the users migrating from XP may only have older (but still capable) hardware.
I guess an alternative choice would be to identify a USB wifi adapter that would clearly be supported by current ubuntu core and make that information widely known. They certainly are cheap enough. Any suggestions for a small usb wifi adapter that will work out of the box with Zorin (kind of like my generic wireless mouse worked).
Thanks
Howard