On Wed, 2006-04-19 at 12:01 -0400, Jerry Feldman wrote:
Solved. Thanks to Lawrence Ferreira and Hans du Plooy. The problem was that I did not run ndiswrapper -d
No problem. I used the README.SUSE (I think) that comes with ndiswrapper in SUSE. I didn't have to do ndiswrapper -d, I was actually surprised at how easily I got it going. Maybe I was just lucky :-) The issue appeared to be that the 32-bit driver that I got from the HP Windows service pack (SP32158.exe) was able to detect the chip. Apparently
On Wednesday 19 April 2006 7:48 pm, Hans du Plooy wrote:
the 64-bit driver did not so that the chip address had to be entered. And,
it passed its first test last night at MIT. It came up very nicely. And, as
I mentioned, being at MIT automatically gives us a few additional geek
points.
--
Jerry Feldman