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Author Message
12 new of 290 responses total.
keesan
response 279 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 15:57 UTC 2006

Jim mentioned to people that we were trying to get PCMCIA and modems working
so someone in his Dawn Ducks group gave him two external 56K (probably v92)
and a router with an Airwire 330TX Maxgate.  Maxgate is made by Umax and I
could not find any drivers for it there.  I could not find Airwire 330TX on
the web.  I found Addtron AEF-330TX which uses the same chip as Accton EN1217
according to BSD, and the Macronix 98713 chip, which is supported by tulip
but may need something special done during compilation.  I will try it anyway,
precompiled module from Slackware.  

This card plugs into a PCMCIA slot in a box that also has a printer port and
two ethernet ports labelled PC and hub and one wider WAN? port.  What gets
plugged into each of these?  Do we plug something from the ISP (if we have
DSL) into one port and a hub into the other into which we can plug several
computers (if we don't want to use wireless)?  I presume we can take this same
wireless card and put it into a laptop computer to take to the library.
What is the WAN used for and how?
ball
response 280 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 16:09 UTC 2006

Re #277: I was really hoping to use NetBSD, but my iBook's
  firmware wouldn't boot from an ffs partition.  I tried
  OpenDarwin, but it was dismal.  Perhaps I'll try putting
  the NetBSD kernel on a small Darwin partition and making
  the rest of the disk ffs.  Failing all that, I'll need to
  find MacOS X Panther on CD.

Re #279: What is the make and model of the mystery box?
keesan
response 281 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 16:17 UTC 2006

MaxGate UGate-3300 Wireless Sharing Router with Print Server.
keesan
response 282 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 16:47 UTC 2006

UMax has links to linux drivers for its routers, but they are broken.  I tried
to write them and they returned my mail.  THey use sorbs blacklist.
rcurl
response 283 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 20:54 UTC 2006

Re #277: http://www.macwireless.com/html/products/11g_11b_cards/11bUSB.php
ball
response 284 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 21:20 UTC 2006

Re #281: http://www.homenethelp.com/web/review/ugate-3300.asp
gull
response 285 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 18 00:54 UTC 2006

Re resp:283: Wow! That's steep! I think the D-Link model (which works fine with Linux, but not with MacOS) cost $60.
keesan
response 286 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 18 01:07 UTC 2006

When compiling a PCMCIA kernel, if I am going to use precompiled modules do
I answered N or M to CONFIG_PCMCIA?  I tried both ways.  If I don't have APM
and PNP and I get messages about them being unresolved symbols while using
precompiled modules, do I need to answer Y to them or compile my own modules?
gull
response 287 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 02:38 UTC 2006

I think you need CONFIG_PCMCIA to provide the framework the other PCMCIA modules work with. I'm not totally sure, though. I don't compile many kernels from scratch anymore.
keesan
response 288 of 290: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 16:05 UTC 2006

I had to answer N in order to compile directly within the downloaded pcmcia
package instead of using the precompiled modules.  It works now except Cardbus
has a bus and does not work.  The precompiled modules for some reason did not
work with the precompiled kernel so I had to compile kernel and modules in
two steps.  Answering Y would have compiled drivers into the kernel, M would
have NOT compiled any drivers, N lets you compile them yourself afterwards.
Very confusing, and now I need to learn to use /sbin/hotplug and maybe some
other scripts in order to use regular PCI modules with Cardbus cards.
wilt
response 289 of 290: Mark Unseen   May 16 23:52 UTC 2006

HACKED BY GNAA LOL JEWS DID WTC LOL
ball
response 290 of 290: Mark Unseen   Oct 4 01:49 UTC 2006

My networked home now has an 802.11g LAN in addition to a
small 10baseT LAN in the study.  The wired LAN connects via
the wireless LAN and then DSL to the Internet.  AT&T DSL
registration requires access to MS Windows.
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