Hi James: I had a Linksys card that required that you set the ssid to the actual network name, so If you were at home and your network name is "home", you'd have to set it as such. Then when you went to a t-mobile hotspot you'd have to set it to "tmobile". Most of them aren't that way, but just in case. I have also had a card that did not work right with the fedora's 4k stack size. The symptom there was that it'd initially work, but then die when you tried to put significant throughput thru it. The only other thing I've found is that some ndiswrapper versions would not work with this notebook. You might try another version. Another hint is to completely delete the ndiswrapper card from the network config, and create it again, possibly rebooting after the delete. Once it works, do be aware that you have to recompile every time you update the kernel. Just go in there and do a "make install". Hope this helps. Best Regards, L. Paul Andralouis --- James Pifer <jep@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, 2005-10-28 at 01:47 -0700, L. Paul > Andralouis wrote: > > Hi James: > > > > When you use ndiswrapper to list the drivers, > > does it say that the card is present? I forget > the > > exact syntax of what it says, but it lists the > drivers > > and if it can load the card, it says "hardware > > present" or something like that. > > > > > > --Paul > > > > Yes, when I did ndiswrapper -l I would get a > response that the driver > was installed and the hardware was present. > > Thanks, > James > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > __________________________________ Yahoo! FareChase: Search multiple travel sites in one click. http://farechase.yahoo.com