From: edhead2003 on 6 Mar 2007 08:01 Hello all, I will be upgrading an old Fedora box of mine to CentOS, mostly so that I can run some corporate-type software that requires RHEL. I'd also like to add the box to my home wireless setup which uses a Linksys WRT54GS and cable modem. I am basically wondering if anyone can recommend any USB wifi adapters which are easily used under CentOS - I have trawled the forums but can't get a picture as to whether this is going to be a pain requiring extra kernel modules etc or whether some should run out of the box - I'd be grateful for any experiences. Ideally cheap USB stuff available in the UK... And while I'm on, I am going to CentOS because, last thing I heard, this was the cheapest way to run a copy of RHEL - is this still the case or should I be considering other distros? Many thanks, ed
From: Rich Piotrowski on 14 Mar 2007 11:57 edhead2003(a)yahoo.co.uk wrote: > Hello all, > > I will be upgrading an old Fedora box of mine to CentOS, mostly so > that I can run some corporate-type software that requires RHEL. I'd > also like to add the box to my home wireless setup which uses a > Linksys WRT54GS and cable modem. > > I am basically wondering if anyone can recommend any USB wifi adapters > which are easily used under CentOS - I have trawled the forums but > can't get a picture as to whether this is going to be a pain requiring > extra kernel modules etc or whether some should run out of the box - > I'd be grateful for any experiences. Ideally cheap USB stuff available > in the UK... > > And while I'm on, I am going to CentOS because, last thing I heard, > this was the cheapest way to run a copy of RHEL - is this still the > case or should I be considering other distros? > > Many thanks, > ed > The wireless question has been answered here numerous times but, someone will probably make a recommendation. I can't help you there except to say that recommendation will probably include "avoid the USB route like the plague". As far as CentOS, yes, by all means. If you do not require support, it is an excellent alternative. I am using it here in a production environment on three machines. One is a mail server for about 70 users, one a file server and DNS/DHCP server and the third one is a K6-3 200 with 128M RAM and a SCSI drive as a file server at a remote location. That last machine has been chugging along just nicely for years! It had even had an uptime of over 500 days till an extended power outage caused a shutdown. Rich Piotrowski -- "Now are you talking about what it is you know or just repeating what it was you heard." Grace Slick To E-mail use: rpiotro(at)wi(dot)rr(dot)com
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