On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 18:13:00 -0700, David Corrigan wrote: > On 7/13/07, Mike - EMAIL IGNORED <m_d_berger_1900@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 01:10:48 +0100, Andy Green wrote: >> >> [...] >> > At the moment you have to do radically different things depending on the >> > exact wireless chipset you are blessed/cursed with. So finding that out >> > is your first move. >> > >> > Use >> > >> > lspci >> > >> > to find out all your PCI-based devices, if it is not listed there it >> > might be visible via >> [...] >> > -Andy >> >> 02:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Corporation Dell Wireless 1390 >> WLAN Mini-PCI Card (rev 01) >> >> Am I blessed or cursed? >> >> Mike. >> >> >> -- >> fedora-list mailing list >> fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx >> To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >> > > I just got that card working on my laptop. This should help. > Basically, get the driver, load it with ndiswrapper, configure > ndiswrapper to load on bootup, configure the card with the gui. > > The details: > > 1. get the drivers from dell > http://support.us.dell.com/support/downloads/download.aspx?c=us&l=en&s=gen&releaseid=R151519&formatcnt=1&libid=0&fileid=202138 > 2. extract them (unzip -a R151519.exe) > 3. install dkms-ndiswrapper from freshrpms.net > 4. There is an inf file in the DRIVERS folder of the archive that you > extracted in #1, run ndiswrapper -i file.inf > 5. > Run these as root, you may need to add /usr/sbin/ in front of > ndiswrapper. I've heard that you may only need to run the first > command. > ndiswrapper -m > ndiswrapper -ma > ndiswrapper -mi > > 6. reboot > 7. open the Network Configuration Dialog (System->Administration->Network) > 8. You should see the wireless card under the "Hardware" tab. Goto the > "Devices" tab and add a new wireless device, it is a good idea to > specify your primary SSID while adding the connection. > > That should be it, I use wifi-radar to search for other networks, but > you will need to edit a config file to tell it to use the proper > interface. > > If you want to have the wireless connection loaded when you boot then > you'll need to select the connection you created and click the edit > button. Then select "Activate device when computer starts" > > Good luck, I hope this helps. > > David I did all these things. The device was not under the hardware tab. Additionally, the blue light for the device was no longer on. (A quick test with the WinXP partition indicated it was not permanently lost.) I am now clearing the FC7 partition and starting again. I'll get back to you. Mike. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list