Ask Slashdot: Wireless LAN Options?
fiji asks:
"I am contemplating a wireless LAN for my house and was
wondering if anyone had found a cheap, reliable, Linux
solution. I have been looking at the
Linux WLAN page and the ZoomAir cards but was a little
put off because the price is $250 for the ISA and $230 for
PCMCIA (at buy.com). Also the support matrix at the WLAN
driver page shows the ISA as untested under Linux."
Has anyone tested the ISA ZoomAir cards yet? What other
driver options exist for Wireless LAN?
After a lot of analysis, the BreezeNet series of devices bubbled to the top of the heap. They are NOT cheap, but they will plug into any ethernet NIC and provide totally transparent 1.5 mbit to 2.5 mbit connectivity between a wired LAN and wireless nodes, or between wireless stations only. Details are at http://www.breezecom.com/Products/brz nprd.htm.
Unfortunately, a 2 node set-up (for example) will cost well over $1000. The access points (wireless hubs if you will) are around $1000, but you only need one of them. The "stand-alone" stations for individual ethernet interfaces are about $400, if I recall correctly.
The stuff has fantastic range (well over 500 feet through walls between 2 buildings with little signal loss in my case), requires absolutely no configuration, and works with any 10baseT ethernet device. My only complaint is the expense. If someone made similar hardware at a $200/node price point, they'd own this market.
FWIW, I have no connection with BreezeCom other than as a satisfied user of the BreezeNet hardware.
Shut up and eat your vegetables!!!