Bjørn Tore Sund <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:<(E-Mail Removed)>...
> On 15 Nov 2003 21:31:48 -0800, John wrote:
> > I've got a fairly new laptop with an internal Broadcom Maxperformance
> > Wireless-G adapter. I'm thinking of installing Linux on it, but I'm
> > wondering if the adapter will still function.
>
> No, this is chipset-dependent, and there's a variety of chipsets
> for each brand of 802.11 out there. Some are supported under linux,
> some aren't - and there are G chips which are supported.
> ...
> Bjørn
There is some support through Linuxant (
www.linuxant.com), but you will
have to pay $15 to license their driver encapsulator software. They
take windows drivers, and write a software layer that goes between the
linux system and the windows driver. Some here reported this working about
a month ago. (search for broadcom in this group with google.) They
also support other chipsets with windows drivers. Other than
that I think you need to find a prism2 chipset to get linux support in
802.11g (someone correct me if I'm wrong).
Me -- I don't need the speed, and am going to try to get an Orinoco based
802.11b card working. It looks like a Dell Truemobile 1150 will work,
and these are $35 on EBay.
I have no problem with a company (linuxant) coming up with working drivers for
otherwise unsupported hardware, and expecting to get paid. I have not
used these, but a few years ago I was happy to go that route to get
robust sound card drivers.
-- Robert Neff
(E-Mail Removed) goes into a spam bucket, thank you sven. Try robert
at that domain.