2012/12/12 Dan Williams <dcbw at redhat.com>: > On Wed, 2012-12-12 at 09:28 -0300, Silvio Quadri wrote: >> 2012/12/12 <hypnos75 at gmail.com>: >> > On Tue, 11 Dec 2012 22:55:07 -0300 >> > Silvio Quadri <silvioq at gmail.com> wrote: >> > >> >> Now, the device is detected on boot, but the message is the same ... >> >> Complete dmesg at http://pastebin.com/hgf2fuXm >> >> (usb errors at line 728) >> > >> > >> > The following line suggests it's not just a matter of a missing device >> > ID, but that the driver doesn't support your device: >> > >> > [ 12.960534] i2400m_usb 1-5:1.0: device boot: tried all the >> > echo/acks, could not get device to respond; giving up >> > >> > It could just be a matter of adding the appropriate wakeup command for >> > your device, but more likely other things will have to be tweaked as >> > well for the device to function. >> > >> > >> > Sorry, >> > >> > H7 >> >> Hypnos, Dan, thanks for your help! >> Maybe with reverse engineering I can wakeup the device? I'm not an >> expert, but I'm reading Argentinian blogs and there are people trying >> to make to work this device (120.000 childrens in metropolitan area >> must boot in Win7 for connect to internet). > > Can you get access to the WiFi/WiMAX card itself and tell me the model > number? Is it anything like "612BNXHMW", eg: > > http://i.ebayimg.com/t/INTEL-6150-WIRELESS-ADVANCED-N-WIMAX-HALF-MINI-HEIGHT-CARD-MINICARD-612BNXHMW-/00/s/MTIwMFgxNjAw/$(KGrHqZHJCIE8mU5sorBBPPbodBNRQ~~60_57.JPG > > Dan > Maybe 612BNXHMWG ? Tonight I can open one and take a picture. -- Silvio Quadri