No, I never suspend or hibernate my computer (it doesn't work: another
problem to fix later!).

To summarise: My computer acknowledges the existence of the wireless cards,
but it won't let me connect to the internet via wireless (see pic in this
thread: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1151646). When my laptop
arrived with windows on, the external (belkin) wireless card picked up the
internet. The intel wireless card doesn't work.

The person in the linked conversation had exactly the same problem, and the
solution he arrived at in the thread he started in Fedora Forums was:

"After not getting answers in this forum i inquired at the NetworkManager
mailing list, and got the above information. I was told that NetworkManager
code "honors" and checks the HAL killswitch, with no user option to make it
NOT honor it (software author's decision).

however, the author(s) were kind enough to share a quick hack of the source
code to disable the honoring of the killswitch, which worked like a charm,
making NetworkManager detect and control my removable WiFi card."

If it helps, I'm using Linux Mint. The first time I plugged in the wireless
card it acknowledged it and set up the drivers for it, which is why I think
it's Network Manager which believes the wireless kill switch to be "off"
when it is in fact hooked up to a defective wireless device. I did read
somewhere that Network Manager honours the kill switch, and uses it for ALL
network devices rather than allowing control of individual devices. I think
there's a clear argument that the downstream user should be able to enable
and disable individual devices, in the event they have a problem like mine.

Regards,

Tom





2009/5/11 Dan Williams <[email protected]>

> On Mon, 2009-05-11 at 14:46 +0900, Thomas O'Donoghue wrote:
> > I found out about this list through the forum mentioned in the
> > following thread:
> >
> >
> http://mail.gnome.org/archives/networkmanager-list/2008-September/msg00256.html
> >
> > and appear to have the same problem. The person appealed to you guys
> > and seemed to get a fix: I looked through the messages, but was unable
> > to deduce what that fix was. I have the same problem (my internal
> > Intel wireless card doesn't work, so I think the computer
> > automatically assumes that the wireless switch is set to "off"). I'm
> > using an external card, but cannot enable wireless to use it.
>
> Does this happen when you return from suspend/hibernate?  If so, please
> see:
>
> https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=477964
>
> Dan
>
>
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