On 12/31/06, Dave Sampson <samper.d@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My recomendation, that may draw flames would be to forget about FEDORA's guis for now... Get it working from the command line. even if you only test it using PING. I find that FEDORA gui's work fine when the hardware is recognized on bootup. but special software I find battling the GUI's slow me down until I understand what the problem is. sometimes you need an updated driver, or try a different backend. then GUI is a frontend that works with different backends. Myself I have to run a Shell script manualy to get my ACX100 chipset to work... it took me a month or so of tinkering, but I got the card to work. All I needed was the NDISWRAPER and it worked like a charm. kinda cheating in the eyes of open source, but what works eh?.... then my guis recognized it flawlessly. Again, I bid you fun and luck. Timothy Murphy wrote: > Dave Sampson wrote: > > >> Try out this tutorial: >> >> >> > http://www.linuxhomenetworking.com/wiki/index.php/Quick_HOWTO_:_Ch13_:_Linux_Wireless_Networking > >> The wireless battle is a fun one... good luck >> > > Linux WiFi is not fun. > Setting up and maintaining a WiFi LAN > is a very painful experience. > > The tutorial above seems rather good, > though it doesn't mention NetworkManager. > I've been trying this for a couple of weeks, > and have very mixed feelings about it. > When it works it is fine; > when it stops working it is very hard to recover, > in my experience. > Even re-booting often will not do the trick, > at least in my setup. > > -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
I am going to try Ndis wrapper. Does anyone know anything about this?