My card is this http://www.3com.com/prod/en_EU_EMEA/detail.jsp?tab=features&sku=3CRDAG67... On the download page about linux drivers there is a link to madwifi, but I can't find any documentation from madwifi site and reading the faq doesen't help. Maybe I should be better asking madwifi mailing list or just wait for better support and stick with windows for now.
You need to let us know what kind of wlan card you have. If you are lucky the FC2 will already have support for it. If not you will have to identify the chip set on the card, find a project that has written drivers for that chip set, download the drivers, install them per the instructions for those drivers.
Unfortunately wireless support is far from seamless or easy at this point.
-- Scot L. Harris webid@cfl.rr.com
-- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@redhat.com To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
On Sat, May 29, 2004 at 01:18:56PM -0700, kusti wrote:
My card is this http://www.3com.com/prod/en_EU_EMEA/detail.jsp?tab=features&sku=3CRDAG67...
On the download page about linux drivers there is a link to madwifi, but I can't find any documentation from madwifi site and reading the faq doesen't help.
$ grep -ir 3CRDAG675 . ./driver/if_ath_pci.c: { 0x10b7, 0x0013, PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID }, /* 3com 3CRDAG675 */ ./hal/ah_devid.h:#define ATHEROS_3COM2_VENDOR_ID 0x10b7 /* 3Com 3CRDAG675 vendor ID */
I'd say if lspci -n returns a device 10b7:0013, that your chances are very good.
Maybe I should be better asking madwifi mailing list
certainly.
or just wait for better support and stick with windows for now.
Good joke ;)
You need to let us know what kind of wlan card you have. If you are lucky the FC2 will already have support for it. If not you will have to identify the chip set on the card, find a project that has written drivers for that chip set, download the drivers, install them per the instructions for those drivers.
Unfortunately wireless support is far from seamless or easy at this point.