for NetworkManager, I find nmtui easier even in the terminal. You run nmtui then move around with arrows and hit enter for your selections and once a network is connected it'll have an asterisk character next to it. Once that happens find the back selection on each network line and hit that then downarrow to quit and hit that and you're live. I'm starting to work with iwd here and will make some braille notes on that in not too distant future. -- Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com> "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." Ed Howdershelt 1940. On Sun, 19 Nov 2023, 'Jason J.G. White' via blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > On 19/11/23 17:51, Jessica Dail wrote: > > The only thing I'm unable to figure out, that wasn't mentioned as part of > > the installation process, is connecting to wifi. > > Has anyone done that successfully and might be willing to assist? > > Find out what packages are installed or available for installation that can > configure the wireless interface. NetworkManager is a common option, but there > is also iwd, and, recently, systemd-networkd. > > You should be able to add details of your wireless access point (SSID, > encryption password, etc.) by editing a configuration file or by running a > command in the terminal. > > What you need to do exactly depends on the software you have installed or plan > to install. For NetworkManager, nmcli can easily be used to connect to a > wireless access point. > > In general, good resources can be found online. The Arch Wiki is usually > valuable, even if you aren't running Arch Linux. > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to blinux-list+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxx.