Søren Boll Overgaard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I've been looking into buying hardware to build a wlan at home, to avoid > all the annoying cables. However, determining which cards are supported > (and reasonably easy to get running) with a stock Debian GNU/Linux > (Unstable) install has proven tricky. Thus, I would very much like some > input on which cards you are using and to what degree they perform as > expected. Google hasn't yielded much in the way of help, except that > D-Link 520 and 650 appear to be working quite well. > I will eventually be needing both a PCMCIA, a PCI card and an > access-point, preferably of the same brand.
My experience has been that brand doesn't matter; the only thing you really care about is that your 802.11b card is based on an Orinoco chipset, and most of them are. Wireless Ethernet is, surprisingly, a case where there's a single predominant standard that everybody uses in a compatible way. So I've used both a Dell-brand and an Enterasys-brand wireless cards with D-Link-brand and Apple-brand access points with no particular issues. My current access point at home is a D-Link DWL-900AP, which works just fine (except that it doesn't have a reset button and I've forgotten the password for it; if you have any insights on this, I'd like to know). There's a range of what features you get with your wireless. Mine is just an access point; one end plugs into a wired network, and it shuffles bits around, that's all. NAT ("connection sharing") features are also quite common; people who sell access points seem to want to sell you the one network-related box you'll ever need. -- David Maze [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://people.debian.org/~dmaze/ "Theoretical politics is interesting. Politicking should be illegal." -- Abra Mitchell -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]