In Windows, the Intel driver is locked to Clear/Xohm via their device certificate. In Linux, you have to set the NAP ID correctly before the scan will work. From what I could tell, the radios were seen but would not show up unless further recognition was made. Don On Tue, May 4, 2010 at 3:44 PM, Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky at linux.intel.com>wrote: > Hi Felix > > On Sun, 2010-05-02 at 17:46 +0000, Wimmer Felix wrote: > > Dear all, > > > > I have been following your interesting development threats since long > > time, real great stuff and pretty helpful for understanding! May I > > ask for some knowledge of you guys regarding channel plans and how to > > access them as well to add new ones. > > > > Case: I have the Intel Advanced N 6250 in my netbook and just arrived > > in India (Visakhapatnam). Here WiMAX is provided by BSNL through a > > SOMA network, based on the Yota network system. Although I trigger > > wide scans only meters from the WiMAX tower, the Intel App doesn't > > give any network (no NSP, no NAP). > > Are we talking about Linux here? He haven't released yet full support > for the 6x50 series... > > > Any ideas? > > How to add new channel plans? > > How to find out which is the right BSNL channel plan to find the nsp? > > > > Many thanks in advance and all the best, > > > > Felix > > > > _______________________________________________ > > wimax mailing list > > wimax at linuxwimax.org > > http://lists.linuxwimax.org/listinfo/wimax > > > > _______________________________________________ > wimax mailing list > wimax at linuxwimax.org > http://lists.linuxwimax.org/listinfo/wimax > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.linuxwimax.org/pipermail/wimax/attachments/20100506/02521563/attachment.html>