From: |
"Leon D. Zetekoff" <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> |
Full Headers Undecoded message |
Subject: |
Re: [OS2Wireless] miniPCI wireless card compatibility, older and newer Thinkpads |
Date: |
Sun, 01 Aug 2010 17:25:47 -0400 |
To: |
OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> |
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On 08/01/2010 02:46 PM, Stan Sidlov wrote:
Where
are those Mikrotik made? What about this? Anyone use it? Linksys
WPC600N ? it's not simultaneous dual band, but I can buy it for
$30 at eCost refurbed instead of paying $70+....
you can get them anywhere you can online. THe Mikrotiks are
manufactured in Latvia but has US Distrib and resellers. These are
not consumer type stuff and you won't find them there. They're
available on eBay as well. There's als the Ubiquiti line of mPCI
radio cards as well along with self contained devices as well.
Leon
.
On Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 2:20 PM, Leon D. Zetekoff <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com>
wrote:
On 08/01/2010 02:12 PM, Stan Sidlov wrote:
I'm running only "N" services at
the house now, bonded (fixed) on the 2.4Ghz to annoy the
neighbors - for two laptops, and 5Ghz service bonded
(auto) for my daughter's x200T. I wish I could find 5Ghz
PCMCIA cards so I could drop the 2.4 service altogether.
There are plenty out there. Mikrotik has the R52A and R52AH
5 + 2.4 normal and hi power those are the mPCI cards. I have
a dlink AGB PCMCIA card I've had few years. The Mikrotik
cards I believe are Atheros chipsets. We've used them and
other mPCI for backhauls and APs/CPEs.
Leon
Her's does "A" service too, I can't remember why I
didn't enable "A" along with/instead of "N",
throughput?
On Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 1:25
PM, Lewis G Rosenthal <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com>
wrote:
Hey, Stan!
On 08/01/10 11:32 am, Stan Sidlov thus wrote :
Is
there any 5Ghz wpa2 -aes support?
The Intel Windows driver *supposedly* supports
all WPA & WPA2 variants on both radios.
XWLAN and the WPA supplicant *should* support
WPA2 with AES on the 5GHz radio, but I have not
tested this (I don't have access to an 802.11a
AP which does WPA, interestingly enough).
Excellent question, though, and I'd be
interested to hear from anyone else with WPA
experience on 5GHz.
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