Installed a Graphics Card--Now My Wireless Won't Work
Josh Stegmaier
josh.steggy at gmail.com
Fri Aug 25 03:57:26 UTC 2006
On 8/23/06, Lorin Pino <ljpino at grm.net> wrote:
>
> Josh Stegmaier wrote:
> > I recently posted this to the Ubuntu Forums and have not received a
> > reply, so I thought I'd give it a try on the mailing list in hopes of
> > finding somewhere out there that can help. For those who read this
> > earlier on the forums, I apologize for the repeat.
> >
> > Hello all,
> >
> > Yesterday, I purchased a new NVIDIA GeForce MX 4000 graphic card and
> > installed it in my computer. I discovered, upon booting, that, though
> > I was able to start X my doing a dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg and
> > setting it to use VESA drivers, I was unable to access the Internet.
> > So, to get my new graphics card to work, I had to shutdown, remove it,
> > reboot using my on-board graphics chip set, download the NVIDIA
> > drivers, reinstalling the card, then finally running the program to
> > configure the card to work.
> >
> > Now, I can boot with the graphics card with no problem. However, I am
> > now unable to access the Internet from my Ubuntu computer. I'm using a
> > Broadcom PCI wireless card, for which I used NDISWrapper to install
> > the drivers to get it to work. my lspci lists the card, and
> > NDISWrapper tells me that both the hardware and the driver are
> > present. My Network Manager tells me wlan0 is activated, but it
> > doesn't seem to be communicating with anything (or instance, it
> > doesn't have an IP address.)
> >
> > The only thing I can think of is that adding the graphics card in a
> > PCI slot is somehow interfering with my wireless card working from the
> > other PCI slot. However, I have no idea whatsoever on how to fix this,
> > or what else might be causing the problem. My search in the forums and
> > on Google have turned up nothing of any use to me.
> >
> > Any help will be greatly appreciated.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Josh Stegmaier
> >
> > --
> > "There is no such thing as a human being who does not have beliefs so
> > deep-rooted that when they are challenged, it makes him or her
> > extremely upset. And those who think they have no religion are the
> > ones most apt to think that their beliefs are TRUTH rather than simply
> > one way to believe." Orson Scott Card
> This is just a shot in the dark, but do you have the manual for your
> motherboard? On mine there are a couple of pci slots that share irq.
> Maybe changing the slot with one of your cards would help. There is
> probably an easy way to check irq values by cli, but I don't know what
> it is. You could check in bios and assign values to each card as your
> motherboard manual suggests (mine suggested certain values for each type
> of card, so I am assuming yours would too). Someone else will probably
> have a better answer for you. Good Luck!
> ~Lorin
>
> --
> ubuntu-users mailing list
> ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
>
Thank you very much! I didn't have the manual for my motherboard (I may have
gotten from Dell, but I likely got rid of it a long time ago.) However, you
suggestion of changing slots worked perfectly! I just removed my ethernet
card that I'm not currently using, moved my graphics card to there, reran
the "nvidia-glx-config enable" command and everything is working brilliantly
:-)
Thanks again,
Josh Stegmaier
--
"There is no such thing as a human being who does not have beliefs so
deep-rooted that when they are challenged, it makes him or her extremely
upset. And those who think they have no religion are the ones most apt to
think that their beliefs are TRUTH rather than simply one way to believe."
Orson Scott Card
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