Originally posted by: TonyRic
nweaver, not 100% true. MEPIS detects and will use broadcom 54g cards on the live distro. however, my experience installing it to the hard disk is that you have to manually install it. 🙁 Don't know how they missed this on an otherwise good distro.
Originally posted by: nweaver
what driver is it using? Is it using ndiswrapper out of box?
I will now have to check simplyMepis out!
It is using ndiswrapper out of the box. At least in 3.3
They are distributing the windows drivers. This is the only way to get it working. Again this is my experience with Mepis 3.3.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
That and I hope ndiswrapper dies a horrible, horrible death.
Originally posted by: Seeruk
Originally posted by: Nothinman
That and I hope ndiswrapper dies a horrible, horrible death.
That seems like a crazy thing to say ... making Linux wireless support even more horrendous than it already is for huge numbers of people
Originally posted by: TonyRic
Nothingman. That is aweful, that would leave many of us with the need to purchase additional wireless cards. Whether we like it or not, when buying a laptop, if we want integrated wireless, then we are stuck with what the manufacturers install into the systems. The logical response to this is "buy from a different manufacturer" however, this is not always possible when there are other features that we are looking for. Using PCMCIA cards for things that are already built in is not ideal, nor it is a valid point when trying to bring someone over from Linux.
You do have a good point though with regards to driver support, since ndiswrapper and linuxant are now so easy to use in that it makes native drivers less of a need. I don't see that as a negative though.