Magnus Therning wrote: <snip> > > Yes, that is a BIG problem. Especially since quite a few manufacturers > are in the habit of switching the chipset without disclosing that > anywhere on the boxes :-( When I was shoping around I ended up buying > from an online store that offered Linux compatible HW. It ended up being > about £5 more (including shipping) but it was worth not having to worry > about compatibility. > > The RT cards are also well supported in Linux, the package is called > rt2500-source and the module can be built with module-assistant. > > /M >
Ofcourse native Linux support is politically more correct. However ndiswrapper with the Windoze driver will also do the trick. Jan -- ** Do NOT use the reply-to address. You'll end up in the trash can ** Mail me at: jan AT schledermann D0T org -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]