Ok, I've found (and made my own copy of) a nice list of linux-wlan-ng
drivers: http://war.istariconsulting.com/resources/wlan_adapters.html
Damn, well I thought the Netgear 311 used Prism ... I guess that's what
I get for my impulsive/hasty buying ...
-John
johnc wrote:
Do'h ... and I'm offic
Do'h ... and I'm officially dyslexic. I glanced at that line and
thought it was the onboard modem.
Hmm, it looks like I'll need to get a different card ... I bought this
thinking it used the Prism chipset.
Poo.
-John
Aldebaran wrote:
On Sunday 09 January 2005 06:39 pm, johnc wrote:
Anyone
On Sunday 09 January 2005 06:39 pm, johnc wrote:
> Anyone have any more input on this one? (see below)
>
> Here's my lspci output ... the netgear Atheros device is no where to be
> seen:
>
> # lspci -b
> :00:00.0 Host bridge: VIA Technologies, Inc. VT8378 [KM400] Chipset
> Host Bridge
> :00
Anyone have any more input on this one? (see below)
Here's my lspci output ... the netgear Atheros device is no where to be
seen:
# lspci -b
:00:00.0 Host bridge: VIA Technologies, Inc. VT8378 [KM400] Chipset
Host Bridge
:00:01.0 PCI bridge: VIA Technologies, Inc. VT8237 PCI Bridge
:
Ok ... that does help ... but further, my question now is: doesn't
lspci report all devices detected, regardless of whatever my kernel's
wireless driver config is like?
I'm not getting anything from lspci about this device. Does that
suggest a more fundamental problem?
-John
Andrea Vettorel
On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 21:09:53 -0800, johnc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm attempting to get my described setup to recognize my Netgear PCI
> wireless card (WG311).
>
> I've rebuilt a kernel to include prism54 support ... but the device
> doesn't even show up in "lcpci" output.
>
> Any s
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