Im running mandrake 9.0 and i just got a Lucent/orinoco PC24E-H-FC. I beleive it was originaly made by lucent but then made by Orinoco.. But anyways i just cant get connected. Ive tried 3 differemt drivers. My wireless access point router is a Linksys. I just cant figure this out ive talked on... (3 Replies)
I just recently bought a HP Pavilion zt3020us and it had came with an internal WiFi NIC (Intel(R) PRO/Wireless LAN 2100 3B Mini PCI Adapter) and I was wondering where I could go to find a device driver for it under Mandrake 9.1 Linux. (2 Replies)
I have a wireless setup in my house and i connect my laptop thru the wireless setup ..
The problem is that one of my other friends has a wireless setup too and his wireless signal comes to my house too ..
The effect is that it drops my service after sometime and connects to it .. then drops... (3 Replies)
I am running FC4:
Linux maincomp 2.6.13-1.1532_FC4smp
I recently changed the OS from windows XP, and have a feeling that for some reason my wireless network card is slower on Fedora Core 4. The Belkin PCI 802.11b card was automatically detected and configured by FC4 when I installed the OS,... (0 Replies)
I'm trying to get my wireless card up. I've been at it for a while now and something just isn't quite working right. I'm not getting any wireless signal. I'm using FC4 with a stack 16 kernel and ndiswrappr to load my drivers.
here are the outputs that i get.
Alittle bit about my... (3 Replies)
I need to install a driver for my RT2500 PCI wireless network card on my Solaris 10.
So I went to the ralink website (the manufacturer of the network card), and downloaded the linux (well supposedly the unix driver) binary file. Burned it to dvd, and copied from the dvd to my solaris computer.... (3 Replies)
Ive been fooling around on my spare laptop and put different cores of Fedora on
and the computer uses an ibm a/b/g card
but the os wont recognize the card and doesnt have the software fore it
is there anyway to get the software for the card on the comp or should i buy a card that the os knows? (7 Replies)
I'm not what this is called so I don't exactly know what to search for to do my homework.:D But I have two IBM T40's and only one wireless internet card. I don't have to money to buy another wireless card, so my question is this: Can I use the card on one system and use an ethenet cable linked... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I'm extremely new to Linux. I've been a windows admin for years stupid me, should have got into Linux way back. So now playing catch up. I was hoping someone could help me get started. I've been online reading but getting confused a lot of info and very different from windows.
I... (0 Replies)
hi
Howto identify wireless network card using Live CD? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccc
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
wireless
WIRELESS(7) Linux Programmer's Manual WIRELESS(7)NAME
wireless - Wireless Tools and Wireless Extensions
SYNOPSIS
iwconfig
iwpriv -a
DESCRIPTION
The Wireless Extensions is an API allowing you manipulate Wireless LAN networking interfaces. It is composed of a variety of tools and
configuration files. It is documented in more detail in the Linux Wireless LAN Howto.
The Wireless Tools are used to change the configuration of wireless LAN networking interfaces on the fly, to get their current configura-
tion, to get statistics and diagnose them. They are described in their own man page, see below for references.
Wireless configuration is specific to each Linux distribution. This man page will contain in the future the configuration procedure for a
few common distributions. For the time being, check the file DISTRIBUTIONS.txt included with the Wireless Tools package.
DEBIAN 3.0
In Debian 3.0 (and later) you can configure wireless LAN networking devices using the network configuration tool ifupdown(8).
File : /etc/network/interfaces
Form : wireless-<function> <value>
wireless-essid Home
wireless-mode Ad-Hoc
See also :
/etc/network/if-pre-up.d/wireless-tools
/usr/share/doc/wireless-tools/README.Debian
SuSE 8.0
SuSE 8.0 (and later) has integrated wireless configuration in their network scripts.
Tool : Yast2
File : /etc/sysconfig/network/wireless
/etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg-*
Form : WIRELESS_<function>=<value>
WIRELESS_ESSID="Home"
WIRELESS_MODE=Ad-Hoc
See also :
man ifup
info scpm
ORIGINAL PCMCIA SCRIPTS
If you are using the original configuration scripts from the Pcmcia package, you can use this method.
File : /etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts
Form : *,*,*,*)
ESSID="Home"
MODE="Ad-Hoc"
;;
See also :
/etc/pcmcia/wireless
File PCMCIA.txt part of Wireless Tools package
AUTHOR
Jean Tourrilhes - jt@hpl.hp.com
http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Jean_Tourrilhes/Linux/
SEE ALSO iwconfig(8), iwlist(8), iwspy(8), iwpriv(8), iwevent(8).
wireless-tools 4 March 2004 WIRELESS(7)