- #Panda wireless pau06 device no recognized how to#
- #Panda wireless pau06 device no recognized install#
- #Panda wireless pau06 device no recognized drivers#
My adventures yesterday reminded me what a pain it was to install the Cudy, even when the installation works. That sounds like a good solution, if it works. but I guess I'll try that and see how it goes. But connecting at all is something, anyway, until someone with more technical expertise than I have reads this thread and has something more to offer.ĬT42 So, kinda just saying screw it, and grabbing a dual band version of my built in NIC, not 100% sure it'll work.
The bad news is that you don't get the benefits of dual band. The good news is that your adapter is connecting to the router (apparently using the 2.4Ghz band). For all I know, I had the same problem you have (that is, the WU1300S was connecting to the 2.4Ghz band because it didn't see the 5Ghz band) and I didn't know it. It all happens behind the curtain since I set the router up that way. The router selects 5Ghz if the adapter supports 5Ghz, and 2.4Ghz otherwise. I have my router set up to display a single SSID (no differentiation between bands). Here's the "However": When I had the WU1300S installed on my machine, I didn't notice whether or not it identified both 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz networks. So I'm baffled as to why the adapter isn't seeing 5Ghz networks. That is exactly what I set up and it worked (however, see below). As I understand it, you installed the driver using the Tomomi script from this forum, which works. The Cudy WU1300S adapter is the same one I used, and it does take the RTL88x2bu driver. Or, if that's all entirely too complicated, how would I go about ensuring a given wifi card would work on Solus before buying it? would I need to do something with those? I had assumed that tar.gz they had was just to install the drivers, the same ones I had installed separately, but maybe that's the problem?
#Panda wireless pau06 device no recognized drivers#
which it is, but in that it has drivers in a tar.gz for Deb/Ubuntu/Arch (so it works via apt get, pacman, and I forget the other one) that you can instal via the Terminal (and a helpful instal guide to boot, for those distros) it got me kinda confused, until I started messing with this, since this stick says it's linux compatible.
#Panda wireless pau06 device no recognized how to#
Unfortunately, I'm not nearly experienced enough to know how to tell if a wifi stick would work off the linux kernel, and I'm on a pretty low budget- when googling it the wifi sticks were all like 30-50 bucks on the low end if they explicitly said they're native capable, and reading further, a lot of sticks say they're "native capable" which just means "drivers were tested on a linux machine, but not necessarily using the Linux kernel. It seemed like they were installed properly. I Downloaded the RTL88x2BU drivers, following the instructions I found in this forum (linked in the original post), the Cudy website said that model (ed: to clarify, it is the WU1300S) uses the RTL88x2BU drivers. Tomscharbach Yes, I am unable to see any 5Ghz networks.