On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 04:31:22PM +0800, Edward wrote:
Hi,
Bought a Prolink wireless-n mini USB adapter and it works great with
OpenBSD 5.5-release. Survived 2 suspend (zzz) with 10 hours of
connectivity up till this writing.
Below is some hardware info detected and hope it helps
2009/8/26 Andres Genovez andresgeno...@gmail.com:
www.crice.org
2009/8/25 Daniel Bolgheroni m...@dbolgheroni.eng.br
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
Brad Tilley b...@16systems.com 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
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 stand-up
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
On 2009-08-25, Brad Tilley b...@16systems.com 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
On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 1:46 PM, Brad Tilleyb...@16systems.com 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
2009/8/25 Brad Tilley b...@16systems.com
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
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
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 same
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
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,
www.crice.org
2009/8/25 Daniel Bolgheroni m...@dbolgheroni.eng.br
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
The D-Link DWL-122 works fine for me, although it's only b and not g.
If that's ok with you, it seems to be one of the best supported USB
WiFi Sticks on OpenBSD.
--
Jonathan
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had
a name of PGP.sig]
On Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 1:26 PM, STeve Andre' and...@msu.edu wrote:
On Monday 02 March 2009 13:11:02 Jeff Flowers wrote:
I recently purchased a Lenovo Ideapad S10, onto which I have
successfully installed OpenBSD 4.4 on. Xorg self configured
wonderfully. However, the built in Broadcom wireless
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833164037
This one attaches to rum(4). Solid as a rock regarding WPA2. It does
get a tad warm though... and the external antenna is nice...
Regards,
Bryan
On Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 10:17 AM, Jonathan Schleifer
js-openbsd-m...@webkeks.org
On Monday 02 March 2009 13:11:02 Jeff Flowers wrote:
I recently purchased a Lenovo Ideapad S10, onto which I have
successfully installed OpenBSD 4.4 on. Xorg self configured
wonderfully. However, the built in Broadcom wireless chipset is not
supported by OpenBSD, leaving me to consider the
STeve Andre' wrote:
You might want to try -current--it just might fix your problem. Lately
I've been doing a trick that annoys my Linux friends--I take their USB
wifi stick and stuff it into my thinkpad and use it. With very few
exceptions, it just works.
At the same time, there are
On Monday 02 March 2009 13:50:21 Jeff Flowers wrote:
On Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 1:26 PM, STeve Andre' and...@msu.edu wrote:
On Monday 02 March 2009 13:11:02 Jeff Flowers wrote:
I recently purchased a Lenovo Ideapad S10, onto which I have
successfully installed OpenBSD 4.4 on. Xorg self
On Monday 02 March 2009 15:00:31 new_guy wrote:
STeve Andre' wrote:
You might want to try -current--it just might fix your problem. Lately
I've been doing a trick that annoys my Linux friends--I take their USB
wifi stick and stuff it into my thinkpad and use it. With very few
I use a Zonet ZEW2500P, which has a Ralink RT2570 chipset (ural). It
costs US$30 or less. Download and pkg_add the firmware mentioned in
the man page and it just works. However, while the adapter itself is
small (like flip-phone small) it requires a USB cable. It's not a
stick like the
I have the same model, and recently just purchased a new wireless card
from ebay for $20, mine being the intel 5100 (supported by iwn in current)
The mini pci-e slot is to the left of the touchpad and 4 screws away from
access. I tested it with an intel 4965 card from another notebook before
Due to different reasons I bought MS Wireless Desktop (keyboard +
mouse; Well, I don't like very much of their software, but AFAIK
their hardware is good enough). While keyboard works fine, mouse
produces headache. I'll try to skip most of simptoms, going
straight to information gathered.
2007/10/18, Miod Vallat [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Due to different reasons I bought MS Wireless Desktop (keyboard +
mouse; Well, I don't like very much of their software, but AFAIK
their hardware is good enough). While keyboard works fine, mouse
produces headache. I'll try to skip most of
It's not very important, of course...
--
Best wishes,
Vadim Jukov
Index: ums.c
===
RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/usb/ums.c,v
retrieving revision 1.26
diff -u -r1.26 ums.c
--- ums.c 17 Sep 2007 01:40:38 - 1.26
+++
I would recommend the GigaByte gn-wbkg
It seems to work the best out of all the ones I have tried.
It also supports 802.11g and AP modes without firmware.
I have played with a lot of different usb wifi devices and besides
the SMC 2662 EZ it was the only device that worked (well with a patch
--On 25 August 2005 19:54 -0500, Qv6 wrote:
I have just tried to use the following wireless usb network adapters
with no luck. OpenBSD-3.7 does not recognize either:
The Belkin was added in June. Try a 3.8-beta snapshot.
RCS file: /data/cvs/OpenBSD/src/sys/dev/usb/if_ral.c,v
Working file:
On 8/25/05, Qv6 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I need some feedback from folks on this list as to which wireless usb
network adapter they run on their OpenBSD system. If possible, please
specify H/W and F/W version.
The 3.7 release notes (http://www.openbsd.org/37.html) cover the new
802.11 support
On Thu, Aug 25, 2005 at 07:54:45PM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
I have just tried to use the following wireless usb network adapters
with no luck. OpenBSD-3.7 does not recognize either:
Belkin Wireless G Network adapter, model F5D7050 ver.2011
This is likely a ural(4) device, support was added
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 03:05:47PM -0400, linc wrote:
Date: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:26:21 -0500
From: Qv6 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: wireless usb
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just don't want to buy another one and not have it work.
Howdy,
I have been
On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 10:49:56AM -0300, Douglas Santos wrote:
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 03:05:47PM -0400, linc wrote:
Date: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:26:21 -0500
From: Qv6 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: wireless usb
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just don't
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 05:26:21PM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
On Sunday 26 June 2005 09:48 am, Jonathan Gray wrote:
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:46:30AM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=uralapropos=0sektion=4
manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=i386format=html
I am
On Monday 27 June 2005 01:35 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the ids for this device were added only a few weeks ago, so you have
to run -current for it to work. otherwise it will just attach at
ugen:
ural0 at uhub0 port 1
ural0: Belkin Belkin 54g USB Network Adapter, rev 2.00/0.01, addr 2
Linksys WUSB12
recognized as wi0 on 3.6 and 3.7
configures for the network by running dhclient wi0 connecting to an
open access point
On 6/26/05, Qv6 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Folks,
I'm trying to set up a wireless system and looking to use a wireless usb
adapter. If anyone has successfully
Date: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:26:21 -0500
From: Qv6 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: wireless usb
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just don't want to buy another one and not have it work.
Howdy,
I have been using the D-Link DWL-122 usb device, it's a Prism chipset
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:46:30AM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
Folks,
I'm trying to set up a wireless system and looking to use a wireless usb
adapter. If anyone has successfully configured a wirelesss usb on obsd,
please email me the make and model.
There are plenty of Wireless USB ethernet
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:46:30AM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
Folks,
I'm trying to set up a wireless system and looking to use a wireless usb
adapter. If anyone has successfully configured a wirelesss usb on obsd,
please email me the make and model.
On Sunday 26 June 2005 09:48 am, Jonathan Gray wrote:
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:46:30AM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=uralapropos=0sektion=4
manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=i386format=html
I am familiar with that link and I bought one, a Belkin F5D7050 which is
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 05:26:21PM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
On Sunday 26 June 2005 09:48 am, Jonathan Gray wrote:
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:46:30AM -0500, Qv6 wrote:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=uralapropos=0sektion=4
manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=i386format=html
I am
39 matches
Mail list logo