It would appear that on Nov 1, Duaine Hechler did say:
I am having a major problem getting this wireless adapter to work under 12.2 with a network that is using WPA2-PSK.
Basically, I can not get connected to this network.
Without a lot more details the smart tech gurus won't be able to offer much help. But there is something that occurs to me because when I first installed OpenSuSE 12.2 on my laptop I had a heck of a time getting it to connect to my WPA2-PSK protected network via a usb wireless adapter... The odds of the problem {and it's solution} being the same are not very high. But I'll tell you what worked for me, and you can decide if it's worth a try. Part of my problem may have had something to do with my laptop's built-in wireless adapter that I wasn't ever able to make work, and so disabled in the bios settings. And I'm pretty sure part of it is "Network Manager". With my other Linux, my solution was to ditch "Network Manager" and use wicd. But none of them had yast. To get OpenSuSE to connect via my usb wireless card, I had to fire up yast2 where I found a choice {I think it was in the network options} to let yast manage my connection. It said something about needing to disable "Network Manager" and use a traditional ifup method. After that I could connect. I don't know what it is about "Network Manager" that I can't connect with it via my usb wireless adapter with any of the half dozen Linux distros I've connected with at one time or another using the same hardware and different network management software. Don't know if your problem is like mine. But if your configuring your wireless connection correctly, using the correct PSK, an so forth, just maybe all you need to do is ditch "Network Manager". And with this distro I'd recommend doing that via yast2... Of course YMMV and all that... Good luck. -- JtWdyP -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org