On 2/28/07, Johannes Berg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just thought I'd mention that since we've been doing similar things for
linux wireless; http://linuxwireless.org/ behaves like that, feel free
to create a user and log in to see how it changes.

I really like your design.  The wide banner at the top is raising the
minimum width of the pages, though, and the wiki buttons that show up
when logged in seem to overlap with the banner a little bit.  Kudos
for using valid HTML, and not abusing tables - you're a role model for
the rest of the web :)

Might I suggest some other sites to rip data from:
http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Jean_Tourrilhes/Linux/ - very detailed
history and info about various drivers
http://linux-wless.passys.nl/ - lots of devices present here, my
favorite place to look for this info for now
http://users.linpro.no/janl/hardware/wifi.html - some more info

Other suggestions: specify what interface each product uses, and
whether drivers support WEP, WPA, or WPA2. I also think that it's
important to record whether the vendor of each piece of hardware has
been supportive of free driver development.  Even if you end up
getting working support for WPA in bcm43xx (correct me if it's working
already), it would be kind of wrong for users to knowingly buy their
hardware if they care about free software, given Broadcom's horrible
attitude about it.  I'm actually coincidentally in the process of
replacing my card with an MSI MP54GBT2, which has a Ralink chipset
that does 802.11g and Bluetooth.  Hopefully it will work in my non-MSI
laptop.
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