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	<title>Comments on: Don&#8217;t Buy Netgear WG511 To Use With Linux</title>
	<link>http://rishel.org/2005/03/23/dont-buy-netgear-wg511-to-use-with-linux/</link>
	<description>My inane ramblings.  Or acerbic wit.  Take your pick.</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 18:17:46 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: JC</title>
		<link>http://rishel.org/2005/03/23/dont-buy-netgear-wg511-to-use-with-linux/#comment-6871</link>
		<author>JC</author>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Apr 2006 00:30:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://rishel.org/2005/03/23/dont-buy-netgear-wg511-to-use-with-linux/#comment-6871</guid>
					<description>Madwifi supports many Netgear 802.11g cards.  They do support the Netgear WG511T.
Madwifi has a huge list of wireless network cards that the madwifi driver supports, 
available at this link http://madwifi.org/wiki/Compatibility .
I am somewhat in the same boat as you are, having problems getting my wpc54g version 1
with the broadcom chipset to work on linux.  I wasted so much time with NDIS wrapper and 
linuxant to find that my card was not so much of a problem but that the yenta_socket 
pcmcia driver for the TI PCI 1410 Cardbus controller has a hardware conflict with the
specific chipset of my card.  I figured this out when trying to put the card in my friend's
laptop to see that his machine running the same exact version of linux and the same kernel
but on a different pcmcia cardbus controller immediately was able to detect the card while
inserting it into the pcmcia slot on my laptop never showed any messages in dmesg,
lspci, or kernel messages indicating any detection of the card.  However, my laptop
had no problems with detecting a different card, the wpc11 version 3 with prism chipset.
So after a few weeks of trying different linux distrobutions, different kernels, changing
kernel parameters, and kernel hacking, I found that there was no problem with the card
but the linux driver for an integrated piece of hardware on the motherboard of my laptop 
was the problem.  There are 3 solutions in that case, buy a new laptop with a motherboard 
that has hardware with better linux support or buy a new wireless network card that is 
guaranteed to be supported by linux, and is known to work with the current pcmcia driver,
or find a better driver for the pcmcia controller.  The last option, in the case of a
toshiba laptop, is just not going to happen, because toshiba does not offer linux support
for the drivers of its laptops.  Toshiba's driver for the pci 1410 cardbus controller is 
only offered as an exe file, so it can only be opened and installed on windows.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Madwifi supports many Netgear 802.11g cards.  They do support the Netgear WG511T.<br />
Madwifi has a huge list of wireless network cards that the madwifi driver supports,<br />
available at this link <a href="http://madwifi.org/wiki/Compatibility" rel="nofollow">http://madwifi.org/wiki/Compatibility</a> .<br />
I am somewhat in the same boat as you are, having problems getting my wpc54g version 1<br />
with the broadcom chipset to work on linux.  I wasted so much time with NDIS wrapper and<br />
linuxant to find that my card was not so much of a problem but that the yenta_socket<br />
pcmcia driver for the TI PCI 1410 Cardbus controller has a hardware conflict with the<br />
specific chipset of my card.  I figured this out when trying to put the card in my friend&#8217;s<br />
laptop to see that his machine running the same exact version of linux and the same kernel<br />
but on a different pcmcia cardbus controller immediately was able to detect the card while<br />
inserting it into the pcmcia slot on my laptop never showed any messages in dmesg,<br />
lspci, or kernel messages indicating any detection of the card.  However, my laptop<br />
had no problems with detecting a different card, the wpc11 version 3 with prism chipset.<br />
So after a few weeks of trying different linux distrobutions, different kernels, changing<br />
kernel parameters, and kernel hacking, I found that there was no problem with the card<br />
but the linux driver for an integrated piece of hardware on the motherboard of my laptop<br />
was the problem.  There are 3 solutions in that case, buy a new laptop with a motherboard<br />
that has hardware with better linux support or buy a new wireless network card that is<br />
guaranteed to be supported by linux, and is known to work with the current pcmcia driver,<br />
or find a better driver for the pcmcia controller.  The last option, in the case of a<br />
toshiba laptop, is just not going to happen, because toshiba does not offer linux support<br />
for the drivers of its laptops.  Toshiba&#8217;s driver for the pci 1410 cardbus controller is<br />
only offered as an exe file, so it can only be opened and installed on windows.</p>
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