Temlakos wrote:
Joel Jaeggli wrote:
On Tue, 8 Nov 2005, Neil Cherry wrote:
Can someone recommend a wireless PCI card that does not need the
ndiswrapper? So far I have one PCI that require NDIS, one compact
PCI (Intel) that can't be load on an AMD machine (BIOS comes back
with an error), a Broadcom compact PCI that works with NDIS and 2
PCMCIA that need to use NDIS.
atheros and it's madwifi driver.
Thanks
Understand that that means "any wireless PCI card that is built with an
Atheros chipset." Always look at the technical specs of any peripheral
card you buy. Netgear springs to mind--so long as they don't change
chipsets.
BING, BING, BING, BING! Give that man a cigar!
You hit the nail on the head. It's one of those things where I've
found I've ordered board_a only to find that they change to chipset
B. Of course chipset B is one of the non-Linux driver chipsets. Nasty!
Also thanks for explaining the atheros meaning. I was about to
do a google to find out what I can.
Since installing a Netgear WAG-511 (with the Atheros chipset) into a
Dell Inspiron 1200, and having excellent results with it and with the
madwifi kernel module, I have become a firm believer in buying /only/
hardware whose makers are willing to conform to open standards or at
least share enough information for someone to build a decent driver for
it. I can understand, up to a point, having to deal with legacy
equipment. But if you're buying new hardware, I advise: don't mess with
hardware for which the Linux community can't build a native driver
because of licensure considerations, hardware maker policies, or for
whatever reason.
Most of the stuff I have above is stuff I inherited from various
Windows PCs. The Intel cPCI has a Linux driver and it ticked me
off when the laptop refused to boot with it!
Thanks!
--
Linux Home Automation Neil Cherry ncherry@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://home.comcast.net/~ncherry/ (Text only)
http://hcs.sourceforge.net/ (HCS II)
http://linuxha.blogspot.com/ My HA Blog