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March 8th, 2007, 11:52 PM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
For getting the wireless adapter to work, your best bet is probably to do a walkthrough on installing ndiswrapper, and wrapping the windows driver that came with the wireless card. There are a few wireless devices that are part of the kernel that will Just Work, but for the most part you need to get the Windows driver loaded into Linux.
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March 9th, 2007, 12:11 AM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
Quote:
Will said:
For getting the wireless adapter to work, your best bet is probably to do a walkthrough on installing ndiswrapper, and wrapping the windows driver that came with the wireless card. There are a few wireless devices that are part of the kernel that will Just Work, but for the most part you need to get the Windows driver loaded into Linux.
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That sounds exactly like what I did, but it doesn't seem to see the adapter. I installed the driver, but I don't see where to go to get it to connect to my wireless network.
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March 9th, 2007, 04:41 AM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
Market forces. If Linux becomes easier to use, more people will use it.
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March 9th, 2007, 06:41 AM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
Wireless is a pain in the butt with any OS besides windows. Don't jump on ndiswrapper right away; I have seen wireless cards not show up because /etc/network/interfaces has a typo or doesn't have wep set or the module hasn't been added to the repositories. With that said whats the hardware? This will display all your "pci" devices (actually a lot more but...):
Code:
lspci -v | less
If its usb:
Code:
lsusb -v | less
It would help if you would post your /etc/network/interfaces and what you have done.
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March 9th, 2007, 10:16 AM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
Quote:
parabolize said:
With that said whats the hardware?
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It's a Trendnet TEW424UB v2.0 which according to everything I've read is not supported natively by Ubuntu. That seems to be confirmed by the fact that when I plug it in it doesn't "just work". According to the info I could find it uses a driver sis163u.inf driver. I loaded that driver using the GUI driver interface thingy and it seems to work there, but it doesn't appear to find the hardware. I did notive when I do the command "ndiswrapper -l" it shows the driver as loaded but out to the right says "invalid driver!" so maybe I've got the wrong one somehow.
I'll play with it some more tonight and try your commands para.
On the bright side I have managed to load the flash and adobe plugins for firefox so at least browsing seems to work pretty well at this point. Using an ethernet cable was totally painless. Didn't have to do anything at all to get it to work except plug the cable into the NIC port. I'd just like to move off the floor next to my router and on to the desk, so I'd like to get that wireless working.
Anybody have any experience getting VNC to work? I want to load VNC server on the Ubuntu pc and use my windows laptop with the vnc client to control it. That should work, right? Or do I have to have the same OS on both machines to use VNC?
Geoschmo
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March 9th, 2007, 02:09 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
You can use VNC across OSes.
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March 9th, 2007, 05:45 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
Nevermind
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March 9th, 2007, 06:33 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: OT: Windows is too expensive
How do I tell what version of ndiswrapper I have? This doc you linked to was one I found, but it's for Ubuntu 5.10 and I have 6.10. I assumed that page was out of date and that probably the ndiswrapper I had was actually the latest one.
Geoschmo
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I used to be somebody but now I am somebody else
Who I'll be tomorrow is anybody's guess
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