![]() Or you can use aptitude hold kernel and kernel headers like me. Their support is too slow if you want to use rolling updates or bleeding edge distros this piece of shit wifi card is not good idea. You can also use broadcom original linux driver from their website – but it is the same, you need compile it and not to use kernel more than 3.14. This method (4th in forum) worked for me to 3.14-2-amd64 (x86_64) but not for newer one. ![]() Podemos, this package does not work with kernel 3.14-2-amd64 (x86_64). I haven’t checked, but there’s one thing I know: the person who has provided the deb package, has tweaked a copy of the driver package found inside an Ubuntu installation. ![]() ![]() cd into the directory containing the package.If it freaks out with the first package, just skip that one. $ sudo apt-get install linux-headers-generic build-essential dkms broadcom-sta-modules What’s your chipset?Īnd check if the output contains BCM43142. Note: I assume that you know the basics of apt-get and cd commands. So I did the only sensible thing to do: searched the Web. Some other Broadcom drivers sure are available in the Debian repos, but this one isn’t. It does come with a nifty tool called ‘Device Driver Manager’, but even that couldn’t find a driver for my wireless chipset - the Broadcom BCM43142. So I couldn’t get WiFi to work on my SolydK installation.
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