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This is a simple ethernet card that came with my old Dell computer. It was $44 when I bought it but most ethernet cards are significantly lower in price. This model has worked for every OS I have tried on all 3 of my computers over the past 5 years. For linux I know it is supported automatically in RH8, RH9, Mdk9.1 and in the version I am currently running, Mdk9.2rc2. There is really not much more I can say other than there is no possible way for this card not to work with linux.
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): None indicated | Rating: 10
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.3, 2.6.4, 2.4.25-ow1
Distribution:
Debian
I've never had a problem with these cards. They are well supported and amazing to work with. Although I once scavenged a 3c905c which had been flashed with Etherboot bios, but that is a wholey different story. I recommend these cards through and through, and I think you can get them on ebay for around 5 USD.
Would you recommend the product? no | Price you paid? (in USD): $35.00 | Rating: 3
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.6
Distribution:
Mandrake 10 Official
I've been told that it's compatible with Linux, but using my system configuration (P4 2000, 1Gig RAM, Mandrake 10 Official, kernel 2.6.3-7, 2.6.6), I've been utterly unable to get it working. I've followed the instructions from numerous web pages and forums and downloaded and tried a variety of drivers (including 3com's proprietary drivers). I ended up finally going out and buying a CNET PRO200 for about $10, and it worked from the moment I put it in.
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $75.00 | Rating: 10
Kernel (uname -r):
5.2.1-RELEASE
Distribution:
FreeBSD
When I bought this card it cost me $75 or $85, I forget which. This is probably unusually high but it was from a college book store that would allow me to purchase things in advance of when my loan money actually showed up. [Read, I had no option since it was the only game in town.]
Even though the price was high I have not regretted it. This card has provided almost 5 years of completely flawless service with any operating system I have thrown at it.
Note: Those include, Win98[SE], Linux (sorry forgot the kernel but way back in late 99 and early 2000), FreeBSD 3.4-5.2.1, OpenBSD (several versions), and NetBSD... as well as a few moments in Plan9 -- which I never really played with too much.
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