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-   -   Looking for Linux friendly USB wireless adapters. (https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-hardware-18/looking-for-linux-friendly-usb-wireless-adapters-4175605640/)

linustalman 05-10-2017 08:51 AM

Looking for Linux friendly USB wireless adapters.
 
Hi.

I'm looking for Linux friendly USB wireless adapters.

What are great dongles that work out of the box or just need a package like firmware-ralink or firmware-realtek, etc.?

Ztcoracat 05-10-2017 03:14 PM

Look here:

http://www.wirelesshack.org/top-linu...-adapters.html

A lot of the wireless adapters work out of the box now but if yours doesn't most likely all you would need to do is install the driver for the dongle and reboot.

If it still doesn't work than you will have to blacklist the driver for the onboard wifi card.

jefro 05-10-2017 08:02 PM

Sometimes I go to my online stores and put in usb wifi linux as search then peek.
Some products may be sold under many different names so the chip inside becomes the search term.

Remember that a few things control usb nic's. One is kernel level. Two is drivers in kernel that your distro has. Three is generally how opensource the maker is. While you can usually add in drivers for many popular brands, it is sometimes kind of a pain.

Lastly is a way that has somewhat fallen out of favor. That is to use windows drivers under ndiswrapper. In theory any windows driver could have worked on linux but the what on that project is slow.

frankbell 05-10-2017 09:39 PM

ThinkPenguin sells USB adapters guaranteed to work with Linux. I needed one once, got it from them, and it worked like a charm.

linustalman 05-11-2017 05:07 AM

Are there any wireless USB dongle brands that tend to be more friendly to Linux?

For example, with printers I know HP tend to be more Linux friendly.

Ztcoracat 05-11-2017 03:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by linustalman (Post 5709012)
Are there any wireless USB dongle brands that tend to be more friendly to Linux?

For example, with printers I know HP tend to be more Linux friendly.

AFAIK TP-Link and Think Penguin like frankbell posted should be friendly.
As frankbell said, Think Penguin works right out of the box.

jefro 05-11-2017 03:58 PM

Pluggable claims to be linux friendly also.

fatmac 05-12-2017 07:50 AM

I use Addon NWU271 WiFi 11n USB sticks & TP-LINK TL-WN822N desktop USB wifi with Linux, OpenBSD, & my sister's Windows box. :)

http://www.addon-tech.com/new_/product/html/?55.html
http://uk.tp-link.com/products/detai...TL-WN822N.html

linustalman 05-12-2017 08:34 AM

I'm considering one of these:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Network-AWU...dp/B004Y6MIXS/
https://www.amazon.co.uk/ALFA-Networ.../dp/B00REZPU3G

fatmac 05-12-2017 02:12 PM

Of those 2, I'd choose the ALFA Network AWUS051NH V2 as it claims to be compatible with Linux, (the other one only mentions Windows).

linustalman 05-12-2017 02:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fatmac (Post 5709715)
Of those 2, I'd choose the ALFA Network AWUS051NH V2 as it claims to be compatible with Linux, (the other one only mentions Windows).

Regarding the one that does not mention Linux -- commenters do mention that it runs fine in Linux though.

Ztcoracat 05-12-2017 04:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by linustalman (Post 5709578)

The one in the second link looks good and mentions Linux.

I've had to return items before to Amazon and they are pretty good about it.
That is if you need to return it.

linustalman 05-13-2017 03:51 AM

Are dongles with antennas generally a lot better than regular dongles?

Ztcoracat 05-14-2017 12:09 AM

I used to have a wifi dongle that the connection would drop regularly. (Lyksys)

However when I installed my wifi card with the antennas the dropped wifi connection became a thing of the past.

This is just one instance. Other members may have had different results.

AwesomeMachine 05-14-2017 02:56 AM

Antennas definitely help.


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