On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 6:45 PM, Steven Friedrich <free...@insightbb.com> wrote: > On Tuesday 16 February 2010 07:29:35 am Patrick Ale wrote:
> I don't want to stop you from pursuing getting this NIC working, but why don't > you have an option here? I would suspect that your laptop has USB ports and > Netgear and others make USB Ethernet in wired and wireless versions. I haven't > checked to see if any are gigabit speed, but connecting at a slower speed > beats no connection. 8o) Hi, You have a good point there actually, I could buy a new card for USB or PCI-E if the need was really high. Then again, I run two other OS-es on this laptop without network problems so it would be more economical to just boot to Solaris 10 or Linux when I need network. It's not a biggie for me if the network card doesn't work under FreeBSD, I want to mess with it localy mainly. Then again, if there is a driver shipped with an operating system and it doesn't seem to work, I'd like to report it and see how I can help out. So yea, just to make it very clear, I am not in a rush or will go completely beserk like I see some people do by reading back the mailing archives cause "their newest 10gigabit Wantastic Ethernet card with coffee making capabilities from late 2009 doesn't work under the latest FreeBSD release and how come it works under Windows, FreeBSD is imature" ;-) On a serious note though, there is a driver shipped with FreeBSD 8.0 and I assume it is there cause it's believed to work. Any pointer to getting this card would be highly appreciated, kernel reconfiguration hints, patches, external code, I am all in for it. Thanks all! Patrick _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"