I was wondering if Phoronix is ever going to tests of usb wireless devices. I think it would be a very useful test as these devices are often used in desktops and even some laptops. But, the reason that it's most useful is that so many usb wireless devices have manufacturers that have a chipset change in a new version. So, two people will discuss the same wireless adapter but later discover that one of them have a different version than the other (and also discover that the chipset is changed and not supported).
Okay, with that said, my question is about which chipset and usb wireless adapter brand would be good to buy? I have a Belkin USB Wireless adapter w / model F5D7050 ver. 4000. It was initially a good decision and worked okay. But, I've since discovered that it doesn't work all that well and has connection freezes or other issues. I googled and discovered that oher people have problems with the device. It has a Zydas chipset (that uses zd1211rw driver and now the MAC driver) but that isn't the problem. I learned that other intangibles are involved such as antenna and other hardware.
So, which brand and chipset should I buy? I googled and researched and for Linux (and I guess it could apply to Windows somewhat as some manufacturers have better Windows-oriented software than others) and figure the best chipsets to obtain are:
Ralink
Zydas (re-named some Atheros chipset)
I've narrowed it down to 4 different adapters:
TRENDnet TEW-429UB Zydas - zd1211rw or Mac driver
Airlink AWLL3026 54Mbps 802.11g Wireless USB Adapter - Zydas (ditto)
D-Link WUA-1340 - Ralink - rt73
Linksys WUSB54GC - Ralink - rt73
I listed the device brand, chipset and probable driver (used)
Comments? Advice? Recommendations?
I'm considering buying one of each, one Zydas-based device and one Ralink-based and then testing it out.
One other caveat. It seems the devices with the Ralink chipset only get better supported with later kernels. I believe I have read that the Ralink-based chipset which use the rt73 driver have the drivers built into the 2.6.24 (24) kernel and on. Any distro that uses a previous kernel would require some tweaking to get the device to work properly.
As for the Zydas-based chipset, those devices work (supposedly) from kernel 18 and on. But, I read that there is some sort of 'bug' existing in the later kernels for Zydas-based devices but it's a doable fix. This was reported, in particular, in Ubuntu.
With all that said, which brand/chipset do you recommend? ;-)
Okay, with that said, my question is about which chipset and usb wireless adapter brand would be good to buy? I have a Belkin USB Wireless adapter w / model F5D7050 ver. 4000. It was initially a good decision and worked okay. But, I've since discovered that it doesn't work all that well and has connection freezes or other issues. I googled and discovered that oher people have problems with the device. It has a Zydas chipset (that uses zd1211rw driver and now the MAC driver) but that isn't the problem. I learned that other intangibles are involved such as antenna and other hardware.
So, which brand and chipset should I buy? I googled and researched and for Linux (and I guess it could apply to Windows somewhat as some manufacturers have better Windows-oriented software than others) and figure the best chipsets to obtain are:
Ralink
Zydas (re-named some Atheros chipset)
I've narrowed it down to 4 different adapters:
TRENDnet TEW-429UB Zydas - zd1211rw or Mac driver
Airlink AWLL3026 54Mbps 802.11g Wireless USB Adapter - Zydas (ditto)
D-Link WUA-1340 - Ralink - rt73
Linksys WUSB54GC - Ralink - rt73
I listed the device brand, chipset and probable driver (used)
Comments? Advice? Recommendations?
I'm considering buying one of each, one Zydas-based device and one Ralink-based and then testing it out.
One other caveat. It seems the devices with the Ralink chipset only get better supported with later kernels. I believe I have read that the Ralink-based chipset which use the rt73 driver have the drivers built into the 2.6.24 (24) kernel and on. Any distro that uses a previous kernel would require some tweaking to get the device to work properly.
As for the Zydas-based chipset, those devices work (supposedly) from kernel 18 and on. But, I read that there is some sort of 'bug' existing in the later kernels for Zydas-based devices but it's a doable fix. This was reported, in particular, in Ubuntu.
With all that said, which brand/chipset do you recommend? ;-)
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