Important EDIT: Try rebooting. When I plug my dongle, it's not recognized as a network interface, rebooting helps.
Do a nice reboot, like
Original post:
Well yes, solutions for Arch would be best, but Arch is not that commonly used...
So, the important bit is the chipset, which is RTL8188EUS in your case. That's kind of unlucky, because the old version of your dongle used another chipset, for which drivers are somewhat in range. However try something like this:
http://blog.pi3g.com/2013/05/tp-link-tl-wn725n-nano-wifi-adapter-v2-0-raspberry-pi-driver/
or
http://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=29752
or search:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Raspberry+Pi+RTL8188EUS+TL-WN725N
or, if these don't work out, search for something else - I though about buying that exact dongle a few days ago, please let me know if you figure it out :D
Best luck!
Do a nice reboot, like
reboot;-)
Original post:
Well yes, solutions for Arch would be best, but Arch is not that commonly used...
So, the important bit is the chipset, which is RTL8188EUS in your case. That's kind of unlucky, because the old version of your dongle used another chipset, for which drivers are somewhat in range. However try something like this:
http://blog.pi3g.com/2013/05/tp-link-tl-wn725n-nano-wifi-adapter-v2-0-raspberry-pi-driver/
or
http://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=29752
or search:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Raspberry+Pi+RTL8188EUS+TL-WN725N
or, if these don't work out, search for something else - I though about buying that exact dongle a few days ago, please let me know if you figure it out :D
Best luck!