sheldonisaac

Group: Members
Posts: 53
Joined: Dec. 2004 |
 |
Posted: Nov. 06 2007,16:46 |
 |
Quote | hm...looks likes it's ready to go. Did you pump it: "sudo pump -i eth0" ?
Also, try ejecting/reinserting the card and then running a script manually. |
Thanks, it was the delay I wanted to avoid, while something was trying to "Set Frequency". Apparently that adapter doesn't understand that request.
The card is kind-of built in to the Dell laptop.
The folllowing two lines in /opt/bootlocal/sh seem to make it work without that long delay:
Code Sample | sudo iwconfig eth0 mode managed essid sheldon key xxxxxxxxxx 2>&1 >/dev/null sudo pump -i eth0
|
If anyone has ideas on how to make it better, I'd appreciate that.
Thanks again,
Sheldon
|