On 12/29/05, Luke-Jr luke@dashjr.org wrote:
On Thursday 29 December 2005 08:57, Leo Mauler wrote:
As for wireless support, learn this keyword: "ndiswrapper".
ndiswrapper is just a hack to use immoral drivers. Not a real solution at all.
The actual driver, however, should be picked up by hotplug, though... Seems to detect my orinoco-compatible card fine. The only exception I can think of to this would be a Broadcom-based card, in which case you get to test out the new bcm43xx driver: http://bcm43xx.berlios.de/
That is as good as a non-answer. "Seems to detect my orinoco-compatible card fine." Orinocos were among the first Linux supported wireless cards. Those and the prism chipsets. Do what works if it saves you from buying more hardware. I actually looked for an Orinoco card when I wanted a wireless, but couldn't find one in my price range. I ended up with a card that had a linux driver written by the chipset mfg. Luckily they provided source that worked with the 2.4 series of kernels, but had to be recompiled for each and every kernel version difference. I ended up getting a Netgear card that had an Atheros chipset, that I knew had a Linux driver. Much less hassle.
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On 12/29/05, Luke-Jr luke@dashjr.org wrote:
On Thursday 29 December 2005 08:57, Leo Mauler wrote:
That is as good as a non-answer. "Seems to detect my orinoco-compatible card fine." Orinocos were among the first Linux supported wireless cards. Those and the prism chipsets. Do what works if it saves you from buying more hardware. I actually looked for an Orinoco card when I wanted a wireless, but couldn't find one in my price range. I ended up with a card that had a linux driver written by the chipset mfg. Luckily they provided source that worked with the 2.4 series of kernels, but had to be recompiled for each and every kernel version difference. I ended up getting a Netgear card that had an Atheros chipset, that I knew had a Linux driver. Much less hassle.
I just got a cheap USB wireless 802.11b/g card that uses the zd1211 driver. I plugged it in and the system immediately saw it and I was able to connect to an access point without any problems. It's just a generic "CompUSA Wireless LAN USB Adapter".