Am 12.12.2025 um 09:12:10 Uhr schrieb Stephen Morris:
I didn't believe the device was USB or PCI because it is connected
directly into the motherboard via terminals on the back of the PC
(where the motherboard provides the Audio and USB ports direct wired
to the motherboard rather than attached via wires connected to the
motherboard (as the port on the front of the PC case are).
This is quite normal. The front USB ports are also connected this way.
Most likely it is USB.
How do I
determine what Fedora thinks it is if I can't be certain exactly what
it is, and wifi is not active.
Check both lspci and lsusb.
I've checked the lsusb output again and it doesn't list the device (at
least by chipid) but "inxi -Nzxx" does list the device in terms of the
device with chipid 14c3:6639 that it shows appears to be an MT7927
device, and that device appears to not have not driver.It shows the
driver as N/A. The GITHUB hit I got on a search of the chipid indicated
that Mediatek have been very slow in developing a Linux driver for the
MT7927 chipset, which the article is saying is unusual for Mediatek, as
they normally have Linux drivers well before product availability, so I
guess I'll just have to wait until the 6.18 kernel becomes available.
regards,
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