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Linux users trying to connect to a Wi-Fi.

66,791 views • 2 years ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Lҽʋҽɳƚҽ Pҽɾҽʂ's profile picture
Lҽʋҽɳƚҽ Pҽɾҽʂ2 years ago

Windows users trying to connect to a corporate Wi-Fi: "Cannot connect." Why..? Show me some errors? "You don't need to know that. The stars just didn't align."

Darryl 🌪️Viva la Entropy🌪️ Morris's profile picture
Darryl 🌪️Viva la Entropy🌪️ Morris2 years ago

I'm sure this would be funny if I could get my speakers to work

Successful University of Success's profile picture
Successful University of Success2 years ago

So true. I remember my first time... It took my whole day, but at the end there was a feeling of an accomplishment. I had to rfkill unblock wlan0🦥

Shafqat's profile picture
Shafqat2 years ago

as Mint user i can totally relate, suddenly wi-fi drops for no reason

DeletedURL's profile picture
DeletedURL2 years ago

It was a wild ride, full of excitement, adventure, and a healthy dose of frustration.

Paul Sauer's profile picture
Paul Sauer2 years ago

25 years ago maybe. 😁 Now it's more reliable than windows.

closebox73's profile picture
closebox732 years ago

I've never experienced anything like this since I started using it.😅

Parsia Hakimian's profile picture
Parsia Hakimian2 years ago

"Linux users laughing at a joke" challenge: impossible.

CommodoreFan64's profile picture
CommodoreFan642 years ago

In the mid 00's this was true, but these days it's easy as even Manjaro is able to install most WiFi drivers with a few clicks if it does not already work at first boot, now getting some USB Bluetooth adapters to work is a whole other ballgame even in 2024.

Bruno's profile picture
Bruno2 years ago

Nowadays, if drivers work, you have - wpa_supplicant - iwd (iwctl) - connman - all the things that don't work (networkd, NetworkManager...)

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