Would the 100Mb variety happen to be based on the Dec Tulip chipset?
If so, there are different itterations of the chip and driver that
should be tested.  Most of their other stuff is a variation on NE2000
chipset and causes few problems.

On Fri, Nov 12, 1999 at 11:11:18PM -0500, Charles Galpin wrote:
> just thought I'd play devil's advocate and say that the recent linksys
> cards ( LNE100TX 2.0) do not work as well under linux (if at all) compared
> to the older LNE100TX cards ( ie. earlier than version 2.0)
> 
> On Fri, 12 Nov 1999, Alan Mead wrote:
> 
> > At 08:56 PM 11/12/99 -0000, you wrote:
> > >I'm about to attempt to set up a home network with a 66 MHz Pentium running
> > >RH6.0 and connecting to a 450 MHz PII W98 machine.
> > >Could anyone advise whether the following network cards would be suitable ?
> > >- TMC 8bit ISA network interface cards (NIC's)  -
> > 
> > I don't know.  Linksys seems to be the popular low cost vendor around here.
> >  They sell "network in a box" with two adapters and some cable. Maybe they
> > have a hub too.  For about $100.  LinkSys says their cards are tested with
> > Linux and I have one running fine.  I would get a hub.  Ancient (working)
> > 10Mbit stuff works great for me at home and I had it for a song.
> 
> 
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-- 
J. Scott Kasten

jsk AT tetracon-eng DOT net

"That wasn't an attack.  It was preemptive retaliation!"


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