ive been looking for this too im about to order netgear wg511t and
wg311t cards
from the google searches ive done they look to be supported
Arden
On Mon, 2004-09-13 at 20:01, Florian Hengstberger wrote:
Hi!
I know I posted a similar question two days ago, sorry - I?m
still in trouble
-Original Message-
From: Florian Hengstberger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 12:01 PM
To: FreeBSD mailinglist
Subject: Linux vs FreeBSD: wlan-cards
Hi!
I know I posted a similar question two days ago, sorry - I?m
still in trouble with finding a
On Mon, 13 Sep 2004 21:01:26 +0200
Florian Hengstberger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
I know I posted a similar question two days ago, sorry - I?m
still in trouble with finding a proper wlan-card.
The hardware database on the freebsd-site did not help me:
most cards are either not avaiable
On Thu, 24 Oct 2002, Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg wrote:
An upgrade consists of the following commands:
'cvsup -g -L2 stable-supfile cd /usr/src/ make buildworld
make buildkernel KERNCONF=whatever make installkernel
KERNCONF=whatever make installworld reboot'
Theoretically you could just
W. D. wrote:
At 20:39 10/23/2002, Dan Pelleg, wrote:
FreeBSD systems are easy to maintain. You can do a source upgrade,
or a binary upgrade, and the system will go through it and boot
to the new version without a hitch. On one system I have I've gone from
FreeBSD 4.1 to 4.7, including every
W. D. writes:
At 20:39 10/23/2002, Dan Pelleg, wrote:
FreeBSD systems are easy to maintain. You can do a source upgrade,
or a binary upgrade, and the system will go through it and boot
to the new version without a hitch. On one system I have I've gone from
FreeBSD 4.1 to 4.7, including
--- Derrick Ryalls [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't want to start a Linux/FreeBSD flamewar, but I do need some info
I have an associate who will be making major changes to their network
and want my help/advice. He intends to have a something like this:
, 2002 5:56 PM
Subject: Re: Linux vs. FreeBSD
--- Derrick Ryalls [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't want to start a Linux/FreeBSD flamewar, but I do need some info
I have an associate who will be making major changes to their network
and want my help/advice. He intends to have a something
As has been said, the clients don't care much what the router is
running as long as it handles the packets correctly.
I would strongly recommend FreeBSD for this and this is based on my
experience in a mixed FreeBSD/Linux shop.
FreeBSD has excellent support for intelligent and traditional
From: Dan Pelleg [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 8:39 PM
Subject: RE: Linux vs. FreeBSD
As has been said, the clients don't care much what the router is
running as long as it handles the packets correctly.
I would strongly
At 20:39 10/23/2002, Dan Pelleg, wrote:
FreeBSD systems are easy to maintain. You can do a source upgrade,
or a binary upgrade, and the system will go through it and boot
to the new version without a hitch. On one system I have I've gone from
FreeBSD 4.1 to 4.7, including every release in between,
Derrick Ryalls [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have an associate who will be making major changes to their network
and want my help/advice. He intends to have a something like this:
Web server (Public IP)
inet - router( Public IP) --- /
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