cbagger01

Group: Members
Posts: 4264
Joined: Oct. 2003 |
 |
Posted: Sep. 24 2005,21:30 |
 |
NEC is a very common chipset for USB2.0
In fact, most hardware geeks prefer NEC to the more troublesome VIA chipset for example.
I have used a NEC USB2.0 addon PCI card (desktop PC, not laptop PC) with DSL and had no problems.
The only thing that I needed to do was type
sudo su modprobe ehci-hcd exit exit
before I plugged in my USB drive and I got high speed connection.
Otherwise, it still worked but I did not get the high speed, just the slower USB 1.1 speeds.
Maybe you can find some more information by typing
dmesg | more
to see the bootup messages.
Does using a different PCMCIA slot, or does ejecting and reinserting help?
A Mepis Linux user has reported success with this card, so it is compatible with Linux.
|