On Wednesday 01 October 2003 23:50, Alex Malinovich wrote: > I've been looking more at getting a wireless card for my laptop lately > as my university is now nearly 100% covered with wifi access. I know > that there is already good support for 802.11b cards available, but I'd > prefer to go with something more modern. Preferably either a 802.11g > card, or a combo 802.11a/b card. But I'm wondering how good the support > I can expect is. Is anyone successfully using any combo cards or a g > card in Linux? Any particular things to look out for? Recommended > brands, chipsets, etc?
Look for the MadWiFi project. I was able to succesfully install and use a Linksys Wireless A+G PCI adapter in my desktop running SuSE 8.2 and madwifi drivers from CVS. There are some people on the list that have installed A/B/G cards in laptops, and some who are running Debian - so it is doable. I ended up pulling the card out of my desktop and going wired Ethernet as the distance between my desktop and my WAP is a bit far and goes through a few walls. SIgnal strength was low and speed was low. I'm thinking of centrally locating my WAP this weekend and re-installing the Wireless A+G card again. Hmmm, project of the weekend. Either go wireless (again) or try to get Debian Woody running on my desktop. I couldn't quite figure out Alsa last time. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]