I've been using a WAP11 model here on my network without any problems... I can't recall what I paid at Fry's for it but I believe it was under your $120 threshold, as much more than that I would have rather been a 'gator's dentist than try to get my wife to agree to it... The one caveat I have for it is it does not have a web configuration interface and instead uses a Win32 config program either over TCP or USB direct connection... You can configure it using SNMP but the device does not respond to an snmpwalk so you have to know exactly which MIB OID to set/read... The good part is they do provide on the CDROM that comes with it the MIB that is used on the device and the instructions do mention configuring from a UNIX environment but not too detail'd as they assume you know what you're doing...
Been using it for over a year now for my laptop with a Cisco Aironet 350 card and my wife's PC using a LinkSys PCI 802.11b card... Regards, Jeremy On Fri, Jun 20, 2003 at 09:04:04PM -0500, matt zagrabelny wrote: > hi, > > what wireless access points (wap) are linux users using? > > obviously cost, administration ability, reliability are all factors. > > * i would like it to cost less than $120 (US), new or used > > * i would like to be able to administer it via a the web. (ie web based > configuration via http or snmp) or have some decent linux based > configuration > > * i would like it to be a reliable 802.11b wap and if lucky 802.11g > > am i dreaming? > > i have read some poor reviews of the linksys wap54g, it sounds nice, but > seems to be lacking in the operation and reliability category. can > anyone comment on this? has firmware upgrades improved its performance? > > thanks for the answers. > > -matt zagrabelny > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]