I originally thought that it might be an irq conflict. Because irq 11 was
used by multiple devices according to bios. But I switched the card to
another pci slot and it worked. So it must have been a bad connection like
you said. It was still irq 11, but I got a valid address, and DHCP
worked.
I have that exact same card in a Pentium 133 system. It's a good card.
This sounds silly, but try removing and reseating the card in the slot.
Really ... I've had cards that have been installed for ages where the
electrical contact on the pins oxidizes and then the card becomes flakey,
and this
I did the nicscan. Just to see if it would recognize the card. I didn't
think to search for the driver based on the result. I just downloaded the
driver based on a Google search for the card. I'll nicscan it again and
see it it's different.
On Mon, Jul 26, 2021, 7:36 PM Louis Santillan
Try using Georg Potthast's NICSCAN [0][1] or David Dunfield's PCINIC [2][3]
to find the NIC. I think PCINIC can even suggest a driver from PKTDRV [4].
[0] http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm
[1] http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/pktdrv/nicscan.zip
[2] http://dunfield.classiccmp.org/dos/
Well, I can tell you this much isn't right:
>My Ethernet Address Is FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF
That driver doesn't like or can't find your card.
On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 4:25 AM Richard Hoffman <
richardhoffman2...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have been having trouble setting up my ethernet card on my
Hi,
I have been having trouble setting up my ethernet card on my freedos
installation. I am currently attempting to set up this card with the
LNE100TX.com packet driver.
I run the driver with LNE100TX 0x60 and I get the following
Autonegotiation Not Complete
Packet Driver Interrupt Number