--- bernd <suse@koepsell.info> wrote:
Basically, the problem is that my signal drops between my machines and the router (Linksys WRT54G v.3). Signal drops and then it picks it back up again after 5-90 seconds. After a series of these drops, the
ap is lost altogether. After an active scan, I may or may not find the ap, and even if the ap is found and I connect "successfully", I'm not able to find the name servers again.
Sounds like a physical environment problem more than anything to do with software. Bring the machines close together for a while and see if that makes it work more reliably. Generally, wireless doesn't go through concrete, or metal reinforced, walls all that well, it's pretty much line of sight and a deliberately fairly weak--read short-range unless you tamper with it or the antennae--signal. It won't like a lot of wood/plasterboard walls either. iwconfig will tell you something about Link Quality, that is, the signal to noise ratio, which will give you an idea if the system is working with strong or weak signals. The same command appears to offer some chance to alter the transmit power of the card, (but not of your router/ap, unless that too is a Linux system). That might help some. I was hoping the thread would return to its original meaning as I'm looking for a "card that works well with Linux, is robust and reliable in installation, and for which the drivers are particularly well tested" (read "bombproof" too ;) In a recent thread, someone suggested the DLink DWL-650+ if memory serves, but that was only a single recommendation. Did you check the hardware compatibility lists for other ideas? Good luck, Cheers, Simon "You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a man is wise by his questions." Naguib Mahfouz __________________________________________ Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less. dsl.yahoo.com