Posted on 01/21/2014 10:04:40 AM PST by varmintman
Um.... Which Linux distro were you having problems with?
I always go for the $5 one though.
150M Mini USB WiFi WLAN Wireless Network Adapter 802.11n/g/b For Win7/Mac/Linux
Anything Ubuntu-based, Mint in this case. I’d guess any other distribution would have the same problem but I couldn’t vouch for it.
I had zero problem getting my laptop online the minute I installed Ubuntu.
There are some WIFI routers that apparently don’t work with Linux though.
I have one of those on a Raspberry Pi. Works a treat...
You haz a pi!? Lucky.
How does a router know the packets came from a Linux box?
I got a Pi for Christmas. It works, but I have no clue what do do with it. It isn’t fast enough to play video.
Ok... Debian based. Both Ubuntu and Mint are based on Debian.
I assume you’ve seen this: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/218
And this: http://askubuntu.com/questions/55868/how-to-install-broadcom-wireless-drivers-bcm43xx
And this: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/379
Just curious as I’ve never had that problem. Yeah, I’ve had to correctly configure the device via command line, but that’s about it. MAN pages and README’s include a lot of this info.
The idea of using a Windows driver in a wrapper for a networking device never would have crossed my mind.
All I know is that one of the routers I had from Verizon worked on everything (Windows, IPhones, XBoxes) but not my Linux computer. It didn’t even seem to exist to the router.
SO I changed back to the old router that worked.
This is what I got for Christmas...
Nerds will Rule the World!
Linux no likee Broadcomm chips.
I've always had good luck with these funky Zyxel units
“I got a Pi for Christmas. It works, but I have no clue what do do with it. It isnt fast enough to play video.”
Here’s one neat project using the RPi for web applications:
Nope, that's part of what I meant in saying that a normal person had little or no chance of succeeding at such a thing and, again, even were you to succeed at it, there're still two kinds of performance issues as I noted. One of he things I notice doing ebay searches on 'tenda usb' is that there's a wide range of performances in such devics, 130mbs - 300+ mbs and the price difference is negligable.
Ok...so I’m confused. How will plugging in a usb wifi device to your PC’s USB port allow your Linux distro access your wifi network any easier? What method do you use now? Are you using a desktop PC or a laptop. Please elucidate.
Doesn’t it make sense that a natively-supported WiFi chip in the external device is going to streamline things?
I have used the wrapper method in the past, however, and it was no big deal.
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