How to get internet going in my current circumstances? ( using a USB cable, another linux laptop and a cellphone with cellular data )

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












0















Here's what I want to do :



Get my Wifi USB dongle to work on my Desktop PC on which I installed Linux.
The Wifi USB dongle has drivers for "Linux 2 and 3"... Either way, it doesn't work right now.



Here's a list of what I have at disposal that could be useful :



  • Desktop with Windows and working Wifi USB dongle driver on it

  • Laptop with Linux and connected to Wifi

  • Smartphone with unlimited cellular data plan

  • A USB cable to connect my Smartphone to my Laptop or Desktop

  • A USB Key

What can I do to get Wifi running on my Desktop PC?



EDIT: My Linux distro is Ubunt 18.04. My WIFI USB dongle is a SUMGOTT Wifi Adapter USB Wireless Dongle Dual Band



enter image description here










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  • 1





    Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

    – kemotep
    Feb 20 at 20:45











  • When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

    – Michael Prokopec
    Feb 20 at 22:19











  • my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:02











  • please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

    – mosvy
    Feb 21 at 0:41












  • added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

    – truvaking
    Feb 21 at 21:34















0















Here's what I want to do :



Get my Wifi USB dongle to work on my Desktop PC on which I installed Linux.
The Wifi USB dongle has drivers for "Linux 2 and 3"... Either way, it doesn't work right now.



Here's a list of what I have at disposal that could be useful :



  • Desktop with Windows and working Wifi USB dongle driver on it

  • Laptop with Linux and connected to Wifi

  • Smartphone with unlimited cellular data plan

  • A USB cable to connect my Smartphone to my Laptop or Desktop

  • A USB Key

What can I do to get Wifi running on my Desktop PC?



EDIT: My Linux distro is Ubunt 18.04. My WIFI USB dongle is a SUMGOTT Wifi Adapter USB Wireless Dongle Dual Band



enter image description here










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

    – kemotep
    Feb 20 at 20:45











  • When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

    – Michael Prokopec
    Feb 20 at 22:19











  • my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:02











  • please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

    – mosvy
    Feb 21 at 0:41












  • added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

    – truvaking
    Feb 21 at 21:34













0












0








0








Here's what I want to do :



Get my Wifi USB dongle to work on my Desktop PC on which I installed Linux.
The Wifi USB dongle has drivers for "Linux 2 and 3"... Either way, it doesn't work right now.



Here's a list of what I have at disposal that could be useful :



  • Desktop with Windows and working Wifi USB dongle driver on it

  • Laptop with Linux and connected to Wifi

  • Smartphone with unlimited cellular data plan

  • A USB cable to connect my Smartphone to my Laptop or Desktop

  • A USB Key

What can I do to get Wifi running on my Desktop PC?



EDIT: My Linux distro is Ubunt 18.04. My WIFI USB dongle is a SUMGOTT Wifi Adapter USB Wireless Dongle Dual Band



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















Here's what I want to do :



Get my Wifi USB dongle to work on my Desktop PC on which I installed Linux.
The Wifi USB dongle has drivers for "Linux 2 and 3"... Either way, it doesn't work right now.



Here's a list of what I have at disposal that could be useful :



  • Desktop with Windows and working Wifi USB dongle driver on it

  • Laptop with Linux and connected to Wifi

  • Smartphone with unlimited cellular data plan

  • A USB cable to connect my Smartphone to my Laptop or Desktop

  • A USB Key

What can I do to get Wifi running on my Desktop PC?



EDIT: My Linux distro is Ubunt 18.04. My WIFI USB dongle is a SUMGOTT Wifi Adapter USB Wireless Dongle Dual Band



enter image description here







wifi-hotspot






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 21 at 21:32







truvaking

















asked Feb 20 at 20:36









truvakingtruvaking

11




11







  • 1





    Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

    – kemotep
    Feb 20 at 20:45











  • When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

    – Michael Prokopec
    Feb 20 at 22:19











  • my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:02











  • please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

    – mosvy
    Feb 21 at 0:41












  • added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

    – truvaking
    Feb 21 at 21:34












  • 1





    Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

    – kemotep
    Feb 20 at 20:45











  • When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

    – Michael Prokopec
    Feb 20 at 22:19











  • my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:02











  • please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

    – mosvy
    Feb 21 at 0:41












  • added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

    – truvaking
    Feb 21 at 21:34







1




1





Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

– kemotep
Feb 20 at 20:45





Hello and welcome to the U&L stack exchange site! Please review the Help Center to get information on how to best post to this site. To get to your question, please edit your post to include additional context. What Linux distribution are you using and what model of USB WiFi adapter are you using? Thank you!

– kemotep
Feb 20 at 20:45













When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

– Michael Prokopec
Feb 20 at 22:19





When it is plugged in what is the output of ls usb?

– Michael Prokopec
Feb 20 at 22:19













my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

– truvaking
Feb 20 at 23:02





my mouse and keyboard, but nothing that rings the name of my usb dongle

– truvaking
Feb 20 at 23:02













please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

– mosvy
Feb 21 at 0:41






please add the output of lsusb (with the dongle in) to your question -- do not assume that it will show the same name as on the box or label. Also, have you installed the linux-firmware and linux-firmware-nonfree packages? By all means, do not try to build the old crappy sources from the producer's webpage -- they're usually just perfunctorily dumped there, they're not supposed to be used in any way ;-)

– mosvy
Feb 21 at 0:41














added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

– truvaking
Feb 21 at 21:34





added a pic. i do not know if that's installed. let me check and ill post the replay here

– truvaking
Feb 21 at 21:34










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














I had a similar problem a while ago, with a different Wifi adapter. I solved this by temporarily going with an ethernet connection to the router in order to download the proper Wifi driver in Linux. But this doesn't seem to be an option for you, so it looks like your three best methods would be, ordered by my personal preference:



a) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, shove it onto an USB stick (That's what you meant by 'key', right?), then change into Linux, re-insert the stick and copy it off from there. Be sure to have your USB-Stick formatted in a way that both OSes can access it (FAT should be fine for that). Install the Wifi driver in Linux.



b) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, then re-boot into Linux and mount the windows HD partition into your Linux file tree. For more help on this, see, for example, this link.
Copy the driver over to the native Linux environment, then install.



c) A 3rd, if somewhat similar, method would be to just use the cell phone to download the (Linux!) driver (*). Assuming you've got an USB connection working in your Ubuntu, just connect the mobile phone to the Desktop via USB cable, copy the driver over and proceed like usual.



(*) A quick look-up confirmed the driver seems to be easy to find and to download. However, that quick look-up didn't show me the manufacturer's page, so I refrain from putting a link in here.






share|improve this answer























  • Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:09












  • why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

    – user58973
    Feb 22 at 18:53











  • by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

    – truvaking
    Feb 22 at 21:36










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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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0














I had a similar problem a while ago, with a different Wifi adapter. I solved this by temporarily going with an ethernet connection to the router in order to download the proper Wifi driver in Linux. But this doesn't seem to be an option for you, so it looks like your three best methods would be, ordered by my personal preference:



a) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, shove it onto an USB stick (That's what you meant by 'key', right?), then change into Linux, re-insert the stick and copy it off from there. Be sure to have your USB-Stick formatted in a way that both OSes can access it (FAT should be fine for that). Install the Wifi driver in Linux.



b) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, then re-boot into Linux and mount the windows HD partition into your Linux file tree. For more help on this, see, for example, this link.
Copy the driver over to the native Linux environment, then install.



c) A 3rd, if somewhat similar, method would be to just use the cell phone to download the (Linux!) driver (*). Assuming you've got an USB connection working in your Ubuntu, just connect the mobile phone to the Desktop via USB cable, copy the driver over and proceed like usual.



(*) A quick look-up confirmed the driver seems to be easy to find and to download. However, that quick look-up didn't show me the manufacturer's page, so I refrain from putting a link in here.






share|improve this answer























  • Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:09












  • why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

    – user58973
    Feb 22 at 18:53











  • by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

    – truvaking
    Feb 22 at 21:36















0














I had a similar problem a while ago, with a different Wifi adapter. I solved this by temporarily going with an ethernet connection to the router in order to download the proper Wifi driver in Linux. But this doesn't seem to be an option for you, so it looks like your three best methods would be, ordered by my personal preference:



a) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, shove it onto an USB stick (That's what you meant by 'key', right?), then change into Linux, re-insert the stick and copy it off from there. Be sure to have your USB-Stick formatted in a way that both OSes can access it (FAT should be fine for that). Install the Wifi driver in Linux.



b) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, then re-boot into Linux and mount the windows HD partition into your Linux file tree. For more help on this, see, for example, this link.
Copy the driver over to the native Linux environment, then install.



c) A 3rd, if somewhat similar, method would be to just use the cell phone to download the (Linux!) driver (*). Assuming you've got an USB connection working in your Ubuntu, just connect the mobile phone to the Desktop via USB cable, copy the driver over and proceed like usual.



(*) A quick look-up confirmed the driver seems to be easy to find and to download. However, that quick look-up didn't show me the manufacturer's page, so I refrain from putting a link in here.






share|improve this answer























  • Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:09












  • why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

    – user58973
    Feb 22 at 18:53











  • by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

    – truvaking
    Feb 22 at 21:36













0












0








0







I had a similar problem a while ago, with a different Wifi adapter. I solved this by temporarily going with an ethernet connection to the router in order to download the proper Wifi driver in Linux. But this doesn't seem to be an option for you, so it looks like your three best methods would be, ordered by my personal preference:



a) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, shove it onto an USB stick (That's what you meant by 'key', right?), then change into Linux, re-insert the stick and copy it off from there. Be sure to have your USB-Stick formatted in a way that both OSes can access it (FAT should be fine for that). Install the Wifi driver in Linux.



b) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, then re-boot into Linux and mount the windows HD partition into your Linux file tree. For more help on this, see, for example, this link.
Copy the driver over to the native Linux environment, then install.



c) A 3rd, if somewhat similar, method would be to just use the cell phone to download the (Linux!) driver (*). Assuming you've got an USB connection working in your Ubuntu, just connect the mobile phone to the Desktop via USB cable, copy the driver over and proceed like usual.



(*) A quick look-up confirmed the driver seems to be easy to find and to download. However, that quick look-up didn't show me the manufacturer's page, so I refrain from putting a link in here.






share|improve this answer













I had a similar problem a while ago, with a different Wifi adapter. I solved this by temporarily going with an ethernet connection to the router in order to download the proper Wifi driver in Linux. But this doesn't seem to be an option for you, so it looks like your three best methods would be, ordered by my personal preference:



a) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, shove it onto an USB stick (That's what you meant by 'key', right?), then change into Linux, re-insert the stick and copy it off from there. Be sure to have your USB-Stick formatted in a way that both OSes can access it (FAT should be fine for that). Install the Wifi driver in Linux.



b) Download the (Linux!) driver (*) while having Windows booted, then re-boot into Linux and mount the windows HD partition into your Linux file tree. For more help on this, see, for example, this link.
Copy the driver over to the native Linux environment, then install.



c) A 3rd, if somewhat similar, method would be to just use the cell phone to download the (Linux!) driver (*). Assuming you've got an USB connection working in your Ubuntu, just connect the mobile phone to the Desktop via USB cable, copy the driver over and proceed like usual.



(*) A quick look-up confirmed the driver seems to be easy to find and to download. However, that quick look-up didn't show me the manufacturer's page, so I refrain from putting a link in here.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 20 at 22:21









user58973user58973

63




63












  • Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:09












  • why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

    – user58973
    Feb 22 at 18:53











  • by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

    – truvaking
    Feb 22 at 21:36

















  • Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

    – truvaking
    Feb 20 at 23:09












  • why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

    – user58973
    Feb 22 at 18:53











  • by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

    – truvaking
    Feb 22 at 21:36
















Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

– truvaking
Feb 20 at 23:09






Did you find the driver on a blank webpage starting with the letter "r" ? If yes, I couldn't run the install.sh. I needed make so I downloaded the package to install it. But to install it I needed GCC. But to install GCC I needed gnome shell extensions. But to install gnome shell extensions I needed gnome shell extensions so I kinda gave up at that point

– truvaking
Feb 20 at 23:09














why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

– user58973
Feb 22 at 18:53





why yes, although it isn't a blank page for me. Googling some more for the manufacturer's page failed so far, though the search results suggest this SUMGOTT company is to be viewed with caution (regarding fake products).

– user58973
Feb 22 at 18:53













by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

– truvaking
Feb 22 at 21:36





by blank i mean the overall theme was white, but the page wasnt all white

– truvaking
Feb 22 at 21:36

















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