802.11 for Linux Non-Geeks?
smanuel asks: "I'm in the process of helping my
non-geek friend get his Linux box set up with a PCI wireless card.
2006 is fast approaching and Linux *still* has spotty support
for 802.11a/b/g PCI and PCMCIA cards. Ask the The
Oracle about wireless for Linux and the results aren't much
better. There are a ton of cards to choose from but support is either
spotty or requires such contortions that I'm wary of spending the
time. What PCI/PCMCIA cards do fellow Slashdot readers recommend? I'm
looking for both PCI and PCMCIA cards; preferably ones with native
support in Linux (I'm trying to avoid ndis{c,w}rapper if I can). Is
the fact that card manufacturers change chipsets more often than they
underpants make this a never ending problem?"
Its not that Linux doesn't support the cards, its that the card vendors don't support linux. If they were smart they'd supply linux drivers, or follow a standard that allows current drivers to work with their cards.
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This is the my biggest beef with linux support for wireless. I haven't found an 802.11g chipset that works reliably. I would purchase one this instant(I'm not kidding, I'll go straight to newegg or bestbuy) if I knew it worked, perfectly. All the cards have their quirks and the support is almost a joke. After twisting yourself into contortions it might work. That said the only card that I've had consistent success with has been the centrino chipset. Too bad these only come on intel laptops and not as a pci/pcmcia card.
I have a pheobe usb wireless that mostly works(atmel chipset). It only supports 802.11b(hardware limitation) and it can't do a scan for networks while connected to one, this really fucks up wifi-radar.
I had an orinico pcmcia card by smc. Very nice card, unfortunately it had a very flimsy plastic antena that broke when my cat stepped on it. Scanning did not work at all, so if I wanted to connect to a network, I had to guess the essid.
I also had a linksys pcmcia card. I forgot the name but it was one of those where earlier versions worked fine but the newest version had a different chipset even though the model name remained the same. This was a piece of shit card under any os. Though it mostly didn't work under linux.
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