On Tue, 25 Aug 2009, Brad Tilley wrote:
> > Maybe it's worth to see this presentation:
> >
> > http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/
>
> I definitely agree with OpenBSD's uncompromising stance on this. I'll
> take quality code from sensible devs over binary blobs any day. I
> admire folks who
Brad Tilley writes:
> their OpenBSD Laptop can do 802.11? Are there some percentage rules we
> can provide? Such as ... "80% of Linksys and 70% of Dlink stuff works.
> Don't touch XYZ adapters"... Again, keeping it simple and in layman
> terms. Any suggestion outside of RTFM ;) is much appreciate
2009/8/26 Andres Genovez :
> www.crice.org
>
>
> 2009/8/25 Daniel Bolgheroni
>
>> On Tue, 25 Aug 2009, Brad Tilley wrote:
>>
>> > Hey guys,
>> >
>> > I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
>> > willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
>> > purchas
www.crice.org
2009/8/25 Daniel Bolgheroni
> On Tue, 25 Aug 2009, Brad Tilley wrote:
>
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> > willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> > purchase. What do you guys say to people who do
Brad,
I've been burnt by buying what I thought was "safe" wireless cards
(you can see me asking for help in the archives). OEMs change
chipsets without even updating version information in some cases.
Best advice is to buy something taiwanese based, based on the
presentation link given
On 8/25/09
> Maybe it's worth to see this presentation:
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/
I definitely agree with OpenBSD's uncompromising stance on this. I'll
take quality code from sensible devs over binary blobs any day. I
admire folks who stand-up for what is right. That's one reason I
choose
On Tue, 25 Aug 2009, Brad Tilley wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
> apropos wireless or man ath, but at the
Brad Tilley wrote:
Hey guys,
I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
apropos wireless or man ath, but at the same time want to just walk
into
2009/8/25 Brad Tilley
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
> apropos wireless or man ath, but at the same time want to
On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 1:46 PM, Brad Tilley wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
> apropos wireless or man ath, b
On 2009-08-25, Brad Tilley wrote:
> I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
> apropos wireless or man ath, but at the same time want to jus
Hey guys,
I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
apropos wireless or man ath, but at the same time want to just walk
into Walmart (or where ev
> I'm looking for some generic advice to give folks who cannot or
> willnot verify what chipset a wireless usb adapter is using before
> purchase. What do you guys say to people who do not want to use
> apropos wireless or man ath
To them, I say boo hoo. Actually, I delete their mail. You should
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