On Sun, 25 Apr 2004, Glenn Meehan wrote:
> The vendor let me open the box of the netgear wg311 card. I was > disapointed to find that the entire circuit board was enclosed in a > metal box, thus preventing chipset identification. with wireless cards, there's a very very high likelyhood that the chipset and all RF circuitry willl be enclosed you need to see what they have on the shelf ... - you'd need to go look at the various linux drivers .... - most will list what pci cards it works with www.linux-sec.net/Wireless/Drivers - or -- google search those particular cards you will buy - and dont get confused, as you will get conflicting posts about which drivers work for which cards - go back and buy the box and plug it in and follow the howto for those drivers for that wireless card - the harder way is to get a list of supported wireless cards ... - there's probably a new supported card coming out almost daily(definitely weekly) with updates to existing drivers - easiest solution - look at your buddy's setup .... and get that pci/pcmcia card ( not your windoze buddies but linux buddies :-) c ya alvin - i'm fumbling around with netgear wg311 and the various iwconfig options - i hope to make a linux-based AP w/ ipsec ... no dlink/linksys ap's w/ insecure wep[a] - conected to a real rf antenna ... 3' or 6' (legit) antenna to zap the silly town -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]