• @[email protected]
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    030 days ago

    Ok, I’ll bite. I tried Ubuntu a few months ago. Logging into Eduroam was a bit of a process, but eventually I figured it out and it worked. Then one day the internet didn’t work and I had no idea why. Something to do with the network drivers. Then I was trying to use OpenOffice (or LibreOffice? The one that came with the OS), and I use Zotero for references. The Zotero plugin had a bunch of glitches that made me not trust it. The Internet (back on Windows) assured me that it worked fine, but it was way glitchier than the Windows version.

    The bottom line is that I just need this stuff to work because I don’t have time to debug. I love the idea though; maybe I was using the wrong distro.

        • @[email protected]
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          030 days ago

          My assumption for the downvotes is that it’s a pretty new (~1 year) and niche (gaming-oriented) distro, and largely irrelevant to your issue.

          • @[email protected]
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            030 days ago

            I don’t understand how it’s irrelevant? The drivers work great and it’s a solid distro that doesn’t have the issues of package updates breaking your pc without a way back easily.

            To me it fixed every issue that I had with Ubuntu /shrug

            They can downvote if they want, it’s just internet points. I still recommend bazzite

            • @[email protected]
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              029 days ago

              I guess that info not having been explained earlier maybe? I’d never even heard of Bazzite, and I’ve recently been looking up what new distro options are out there.

              • @[email protected]
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                129 days ago

                Fwiw bazzite itself is new but it’s just built on top of Fedora and is really stable. I have only had one issue with kernel panic on boot but rolling back was as easy as picking my version before the last update. Was fixed in less than a day

                • @[email protected]
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                  229 days ago

                  Yeah I did see that after looking into it. It’s definitely on my growing list of distros to check out now, so thanks for putting it on my radar.

    • @[email protected]
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      030 days ago

      I’ve heard of issues connecting to Eduroam a few times on Linux, but I just don’t get it.

      I’m on Debian with KDE Plasma, and it was very much plug-and-play when connecting to Eduroam. What issues did you have?

      • @[email protected]
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        029 days ago

        I had this issue, using pop. It just would not connect without specifying some parameters (I can’t remember which, domain or something and a few others). I had the same problem on Android, with the same solution.

        • @[email protected]
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          129 days ago

          Ah yeah, that’s just what you need to do to connect to Eduroam on anything, since you need to authenticate via your institution.

            • @[email protected]
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              028 days ago

              And was your username <name/ID>@<domain>?

              Because that’s the same thing as entering the name/ID and domain separately. It’s just put into a different field.

              • @[email protected]
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                127 days ago

                This is the information I had to specify when I connected from Linux and Android:

                Security: WPA2 Enterprise/802.1xEAP Encryption/EAP: PEAP EAP Phase 2 authentication: MSCHAPv2 CA certificate: <domain>

                That is in addition to a username and password I had to create via the university’s website. On Windows, username and password sufficient.