On Tue, Dec 04, 2007 at 11:40:51AM -0600, David Booth wrote:
> >
> The Dell 1490 card works with NDIS. The go for less than $20 on ebay.
I thought this was a mini-PCI not mini-PCI-express card or is this one
of the occaisons where Dell switch product but retain the same name?
___
On Tue, Dec 04, 2007 at 12:02:58PM -0500, Michael Proto wrote:
Geoff Buckingham wrote:
> I recently purchased the Dell I6400 Ubuntu laptop, with the express intent
of
> running FreeBSD on it.
>
> My intention was to use this a working machine using PC-BSD, I.E. RELENG_6,
limiting tink
On Tuesday 04 December 2007, Geoff Buckingham wrote:
> I recently purchased the Dell I6400 Ubuntu laptop, with the express
> intent of running FreeBSD on it.
>
> My intention was to use this a working machine using PC-BSD, I.E.
> RELENG_6, limiting tinkering, experimentation to other systems.
>
> I
Geoff Buckingham wrote:
> I recently purchased the Dell I6400 Ubuntu laptop, with the express intent of
> running FreeBSD on it.
>
> My intention was to use this a working machine using PC-BSD, I.E. RELENG_6,
> limiting tinkering, experimentation to other systems.
>
> It comes with an Intel 3945
Michael Proto wrote:
>
> I don't have access to my laptop at the moment (and hence can't pull the
> exact kernel output regarding the adapter), but I have a ThinkPad R60
> with the ThinkPad a/b/g miniPCI-e wireless card that worked fine under
> FreeBSD 6.2. I believe you can find the actual part h
I recently purchased the Dell I6400 Ubuntu laptop, with the express intent of
running FreeBSD on it.
My intention was to use this a working machine using PC-BSD, I.E. RELENG_6,
limiting tinkering, experimentation to other systems.
It comes with an Intel 3945[1] mini PCIe card, which I knew woul