> > > What kind of hardware is used for the base station? > > The base station we have here is a Cisco Aironet (340 or 350).
> that setup looks similar to the one I've got at home; however, > I'm using a PCMCIA cisco aironet 350 card on debian-x86 > as base station. > > Note that for some bizarre reason, the cisco aironet card > must be driven in ad-hoc mode, not as "master"; else, the > aironet won't find it. The aironet then must be in manage ^^^^^^^ you meant "airport"? > mode, though. > I'm not sure if/how to configure this in a cisco base > station, but presumably it should be possible. Our CISCO base station is in "master" mode. > I'll attach you the relevant part from my /etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts > file, just in case. Thx. > > People using x86 laptops have succeeded in making their wireless > > connection work. > hm, that's strange, though. > > > > If possible, I suggest also booting into OS X and checking if/what > > > networks are visible there; that helped me quite a bit when > > > I set up my own environment. > > Oops. I forgot to mention that my wireless connection does not work > > either from within OS X. I got the same symptoms, i.e. a bogus > > access point value (44:44:...) and a base station not seeing anything. > > That's what made me think I may have an antenna problem. The antenna > > cable seems well plugged though. > btw, what antenna cable? At the base station? I'm getting > confused, here. I'm talking about ibook's antenna. > Since (above you claimed) others have succesfully getting their > wireless connection to work with x86, the base station can't > be the problem. On the other hand, the ibook2 doesn't have any > antenna?! Ibook2 does have an antenna. It is integrated and the only thing to do upon inserting the airport card is plugging the little antenna cable into the card. > btw: in order to actually see an access point, the airport > card must be up but not necessarily configured with an > IP address; you may just issue an "ifconfig eth1 up" without > any IP address to get it there. You're right. -- Eric