Greetings

On a side note it would be nice to have some tutorial or whatever to
help code driver and/or reverse an already written driver for new
devices.
I did not find anything really helpfull (i googled but maybe i'm
dumber then i pretend to be).
As for TI they don't even bother answering anyone for documentation as
i had for free the famous DWL 550+ and DWL 650+ and i would like to
create a driver for them much like the ACX100 (and ACX111 )driver
under linux, but i don't want to break any liscence doing so.I know
that the cards load up a firmweare from the driver and boot up (eCPU
).But i don't really know where to go from there .


Any help is welcome.

Best Regards Laurent.

On 5/11/06, Jonathan Gray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, May 11, 2006 at 03:55:06PM +0200, Peter Philipp wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just bought a Wifi USB stick and it doesn't seem to work on OpenBSD.  
Instead
> of returning it (39 euros) I'm willing to send this to an OpenBSD developer 
who
> wants to make a driver work for this.  Not sure how non-blob friendly the 
maker
> of this hardware is...
>
> Maker: Fritz! WLAN, AVM
> Model: Fritz!WLAN USB Stick, 802.11g++, 125 Mbit/s, WPA2 (802.11i)

This sounds like a Texas Instruments TNETW1450, the marketing for
which talks of both 125Mbit rates and "g++".  How nice of them
to try to tie the name for their additional non standard crap to something
standardised.  When you talk to an access point things are going to
run at 54Mbps unless you have an accompanying cheap and nasty access
point by TI that imlpements the same vendor specific nonsense.

http://focus.ti.com/general/docs/bcg/bcgprodcontent.tsp?templateId=6116&navigationId=12471&contentId=4043
http://focus.ti.com/pdfs/bcg/tnetw1450_prod_bulletin.pdf

TI don't release documentation, and don't respond to requests to
allow their firmware to be redistributed.

The upshot of all this is that people can avoid products that incorporate
a TI chipset by not buying any so called "g++" or "125 Mbps" gear.

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