Hy,
Any news about the development of this driver, is someone working on it?
Thanks in advance,
Coszmin
--
View this message in context:
http://freebsd.1045724.n5.nabble.com/Netgear-WNA1000N-USB-wlan-device-tp4980136p5565210.html
Sent from the freebsd-current mailing list archive at
On 11/10/11 11:11 AM, Adrian Chadd wrote:
> .. it's only good news if someone ports it. There's been efforts here
> and there to tinker with it but no-one's submitted a working driver
> for inclusion into -HEAD ;)
>
Agreed. :)
Though, I may have gotten my hopes up for no reason. I've just teste
.. it's only good news if someone ports it. There's been efforts here
and there to tinker with it but no-one's submitted a working driver
for inclusion into -HEAD ;)
Adrian
___
freebsd-current@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/l
On 11/10/11 10:35 AM, Warren Block wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Nov 2011, Glen Barber wrote:
>
>> Netgear has these neat little USB micro wireless network adapters[1]
>> that one could plug in and forget about without fear of, for example,
>> breaking the device.
>>
>> Said devices are really nice for thos
On Thu, 10 Nov 2011, Glen Barber wrote:
Netgear has these neat little USB micro wireless network adapters[1]
that one could plug in and forget about without fear of, for example,
breaking the device.
Said devices are really nice for those of us without supported
integrated wireless chipsets, su
On 11/10/11 3:38 AM, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
> On Thursday 10 November 2011 06:56:23 Glen Barber wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Netgear has these neat little USB micro wireless network adapters[1]
>> that one could plug in and forget about without fear of, for example,
>> breaking the device.
>>
>> Said de
On Thursday 10 November 2011 06:56:23 Glen Barber wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Netgear has these neat little USB micro wireless network adapters[1]
> that one could plug in and forget about without fear of, for example,
> breaking the device.
>
> Said devices are really nice for those of us without supported
Hi,
Netgear has these neat little USB micro wireless network adapters[1]
that one could plug in and forget about without fear of, for example,
breaking the device.
Said devices are really nice for those of us without supported
integrated wireless chipsets, such as those found in late 2010 MacBook