On Sat, 21 Aug 2004, Adam Boettiger wrote: > I am a newbie to linux. Just partitioned my drive and installed Fedora > Core 2 on a 10G partition. The partition and install went very smoothly > and I am exploring linux but am stuck trying to get internet access. > > I'm on a Dell D600 laptop with a Centrino chip (wireless) trying > to access a WLAN in my home. > > When I looked at what was running in XP for the internet > connection it was: > > Intel Pro / Wireless LAN 2100 3A mini pci adapter > > When I go to set up a wireless internet connection in linux, this > is not listed in the adapters list. > > Is this wireless card compatible with Fedora Core 2 or do I need > to download a driver or adapter for it? If so, how and where?
Wirless 'net access is a real weak point for Linux. If you get a wirless card or computer with wireless and the Linux distribution you use it with detects and sets it up, you're very lucky. Most folks probably end up researching wirless cards and find out which ones they can expect to work under Linux, then they go and buy it. But even this isn't a sure thing. Apparently wireless NIC manufacturers frequently make key hardware changes (e.g., use a different chipset) without notifying anyone or changing model numbers. It's sort of a messy situation, and poor support is not entirely the fault of Linux developers. I tried recently to get a wireless card that would work under Linux and I was reduced to stopping in at stores, grabbing a card, testing it to see if it would work, then returning it to the store when it didn't. Several tries were unsuccessful. If I would have persisted, or were I willing to spend more money, I could eventually have gotten one that worked. I just set the project aside though, since it wasn't an absolute necessity and I was more concerned with getting a bargain. Anyway, were I in your shoes I would start with a Google search. Search under the terms XP has given you for card identification. Then, restrict the search by the term "Linux" and see what people are saying about this card and Linux - if anything. The important thing will be whether you can identify the chipset. I've never used Fedora, so I can't tell you a thing about how it should be set up for wireless or what it should/shouldn't do in terms of hardware autodetection. Likely a module (maybe 2) will need to be loaded for the chipset - if they're available. How to load modules on Fedora I can't say. Modules are sort of a Linux equivalent to what drivers are under Windows, by the way. You've hit a Linux rough spot with this one. Good luck, James - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
