Linksys tends to be screwball but what you really need to track, if you can, is the chipset. Atheros is the gold standard, both because the open-source drivers rock and because they can "re-broadcast" - you can feed the system Internet from something else and use an Atheros card to drive it as a WiFi hot-spot. This same ability makes it superb at cracking WEP if that's what you're into. Unfortunately USB-plug-in Atheros devices aren't too common. Broadcom support is OK, Intel is better but neither are any good at re-broadcasting. Intel has good fully-open-source drivers while Broadcom requires loading firmware into the card from a "blob"...Ubuntu makes this a painless process though you will need another Internet connection first to get the firmware pack. I usually detest Realtek chipsets (which Linksys uses a lot) and Ralink can suck too at times...both are found on low-end devices a lot. You can usually google a particular device by make and model and figure out which chipset it's using, either by mentions on ubuntuforums or if nothing else, go fetch the driver package for Windows and take apart the .INI file or look at other files in the installer - it's usually obvious from there. If you're buying something PCI-based retail, look at the actual picture of the device, look for the biggest chip, you can often read the chipset maker's logo right there. Jim --------------------------------------------------- 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