Re: Wireless cards

From: Mike McCarty (mike.mccarty_at_sbcglobal.net)
Date: 07/01/05

  • Next message: Bryan Elliott: "Re: Installing Fedora Core 4 on a Apple Powerbook G4 1.6GHz"
    Date: Fri, 01 Jul 2005 09:02:16 -0500
    To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list@redhat.com>
    
    

    Ian Malone wrote:

    > Mike McCarty wrote:
    >
    > > John Summerfied wrote:
    >
    [snip]

    >
    > Under Linux a Linux driver is a good thing. Under Windows a Windows
    > driver is a good thing. I think wires are getting crossed here, since
    > the words quoted below are yours:

    [snip]

    Ok, we agree perfectly, then.

    [snip]

    > list. If the Windows driver is broken on ndis you have little recourse,
    > because it might work perfectly under Windows. I suppose I failed to
    > see where the question had nothing related to Linux in it. If the
    > driver is broken on Windows of course you throw yourself on the
    > manufacturer's mercy and hope for the best. (And have you really tried
    > this? I'm here to tell you it doesn't always work.)
    >
    I've had experience with this issue. And so far, I'm pleased to tell you
    that
    they get fixed. In fact, they often are fixed before I have the problem,
    because
    my hardware is not cutting edge. By the time I bought a scanner, for
    example,
    there was an additional little piece of paper in the box saying "If you
    have this
    problem, there is fix on our website at no charge." I installed, and
    downloaded
    the new driver, and I never even used the old one to find out whether it had
    the problem. And I didn't have to give information about my mother's maiden
    name to get the new driver. It was just sitting there ready to download.
    I've
    had similar sorts of experience with other manufacturers. (HP made the
    scanner,
    btw.)

    Your tone seems pejorative, though. Using words like "mercy" and "hope"
    indicates that you have had some extremely bad experiences.

    Of course, if a driver works on Windows, but won't on some who-knows-what-
    it-is-thingy that hopes to make it run under another OS (*any* other
    OS), no one
    in his right mind at the company which sells for Windows is going to spend
    even one second working on that.

    How much support would I get here if I asked for something to make a Linux
    driver work with Windows?

    > This thread started with someone asking what wireless cards would work
    > under FC4. While Windows-only cards will work under ndis there is
    > more mileage in picking something that has proper Linux support. I
    > don't see that point being under contention.
    >
    Certainly not. The appearance to me, however, was "Windows drivers
    may do bad things to your machine." Unqualified, even in this general
    context, seems to me like a generally malign comment. The immediate
    context did not seem to be "ndis is not really the way to go".

    Sorry if I over reacted. Perhaps I should have asked you whether that
    was what you really meant to say.

    Mike

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  • Next message: Bryan Elliott: "Re: Installing Fedora Core 4 on a Apple Powerbook G4 1.6GHz"

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