fouldragon@aol.com wrote: > Years ago, I assumed that Linux would falter on the desktop as long as > there was no AOL client. > > Fortunately, AOL has withered against cheap, omnipresent broadband, but > it seems like we're back at square one on getting to usable systems for > customers. > > Now, linux is going to falter as long as wireless is still a mess. > > I have what would seem like fairly simple setup-- one router, two PCs, > one Laserjet 5 with a network card-- all on static IP addresses, and > WPA. I use a rt61-compatible 802.11 card, supposedly very > Linux-friendly. > > So I decided to try Wolvix, as it supposedly included wifi-radar to > make things easy. > > Once it boots (and X fails because it doesn't support my > now-a-full-generation-old 7600GS), I find that it's not loading the > firmware files for the 802.11 card. They moved where you put those > when nobody was looking. > > So I move them manually. The card appears as wlan0. But wifi-radar > expects it to be eth1, and scans aimlessly until I find THAT config > file and edit it. > > Smooth sailing from now on? Nope. I set everything up, but > wpa-supplicant seems to throw up, beefing about nonsupported calls, so > I'm still not actually getting on the network. > > In the time I spent fighting, I could probably have drilled a hole > through my floor, fed some Cat 5 through down to the router, and had a > supported wired network. > > And the sad thing is that it's a worse situation now-- in the old days, > only the most obscure drivers (i. e. my old LMSI CM-205 1X CD reader) > were seperate packages. Now, many more are-- both "fun to haves" like > hardware sensors, and "big deals" like accelerated X11. You had, at > least, a well-supported system without getting it on a network. > > I hate to imagine how much worse this would be if 1) my card was one > with poor or no support (i. e. where ndiswrapper didn't work well) or > 2) I was the typical laptop wireless user, who might need different > profiles for different environments. > > I got wireless working once, in 2003, on my little PII-266 Thinkpad, > but that was in the days of open 802.11b networks and only a handful of > chipsets. > :wq > > (I spend so long sshd into a server doing minor text edits with vi, > that I've started doing :wq in the middle of GUI text editors :) ) > ________________________________________________________________________ > Email and AIM finally together. You've gotta check out free AOL Mail! - > http://mail.aol.com > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > > WICD is good. That helped me overcome some nightmares with my cursed Broadcom 4318. Feh, I hate Broadcom. But at least it works now. I --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss