10-17-2005
Wireless
Can someone please point me in the correct direction for setting up a wireless card using HP-UX 11iV1? I know its different depending on the type of card I have, but im looking for a direction.
Thanks!
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
Hi
Having a problem getting the Orinoco silver
to work on Redhat 7.3. (new full install)
On install it worked - sometimes - but I had to manually set the default gateway to the wireless instead of the 10/100 ethernet card.
Most often I had to restart pcmcia to get it going properly.
Now its... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: caveman_piet
4 Replies
2. Linux
Hello everybody:
Can you help me, I have installed the Kubunto on my laptop, my wireless connection it is with an Linksys WPC54G adapter.
I tried with several tools to use it but just do not work.
Please help me!!! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: GEIER
2 Replies
3. Linux
got a wireless usb network card. how can i make it work under redhat9?. it does not come with linux driver. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: GJ2
0 Replies
4. BSD
I've just installed OpenBSD on my laptop (IBM Thinkpad T42) and since this is my first time with wireless networking in OpenBSD I'm a bit lost.
What I would like to do is connect to a wireless network using WEP or WPA. Where do I place the key and essid? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Timmy66
3 Replies
5. Linux
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)
Discussion started by: Texasone
7 Replies
6. Red Hat
I have a Dell Latitude D820 loaded with RHEL 5. I am trying to get the internal wireless adapter to work on it. It recognizes that there is a wireless nic but it recognizes it as eth1 not wlan0. It's a Broadcom BCM94311MCG wlan mini-PCI. I was hoping I could be pointed in the right direction. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: darren.wyatt
3 Replies
7. IP Networking
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)
Discussion started by: Texasone
2 Replies
8. Ubuntu
I tried this
Working wireless broadcom b43 hardy 8.04 - Ubuntu Forums
and it worked the first time.
Now there is something else because the lamp that indicates that the card is running is working.(it wasnt the first time). Now I just cant find any wireless network. I dont know how this... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: isato
3 Replies
9. Debian
This is my first attempt at Linux, you can probably tell.
OK, it appears the problem is that Debian Lenny thinks my wireless card is a wired card?
The wireless network extends to my computer, that is certain.
I have a Dell PIII desktop computer, with both a 3COM wired card, and a D-Link... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: fguy
17 Replies
CNW(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual CNW(4)
NAME
cnw -- Netwave AirSurfer wireless network driver
SYNOPSIS
cnw* at pcmcia? function ?
DESCRIPTION
The cnw interface provides access to a theoretical 1 Mb/s wireless Ethernet network based on the Netwave AirSurfer Wireless LAN (formerly
known as the Xircom Netwave Wireless LAN).
Note that the driver does not support newer devices such as the Netwave AirSurfer ``Plus'', or the BayStack 650/660. These devices are sup-
ported by the awi(4) driver.
Netwave devices are not compatible with IEEE 802.11 wireless networks. Also note that there are Netwave devices with different wireless fre-
quency, depending on the radio band plan in each country.
The card uses 36K of I/O memory mapped to the card. You may need to increase memory space available to the PCMCIA controller. See pcmcia(4)
for details.
In use, the cards appear to achieve up to a 420Kb/s transfer rate, though a transfer rate between 250Kb/s and 350Kb/s is typical.
The card operates in the 2.4GHz frequency range and is subject to interference from microwaves, IEEE 802.11 wireless network devices, as well
as earth. For example, it seems that IEEE 802.11 channel 14 conflicts with Netwave (US frequency). They interfere with each other if they
are both operated in the same geographic region, causing weird packet loss. You may be able to avoid the interference with IEEE 802.11
devices, by changing the IEEE 802.11 channel.
HARDWARE
Cards supported by the cnw driver include:
Xircom CreditCard Netwave
NetWave AirSurfer
DIAGNOSTICS
cnw0: can't map memory Indicates that the driver was not able to allocate enough PCMCIA bus address space into which to map the device. See
pcmcia(4) and increase memory available to the PCMCIA controller.
SEE ALSO
arp(4), awi(4), inet(4), intro(4), pcmcia(4), cnwctl(8)
BSD
January 5, 1997 BSD