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Date:      Tue, 18 Aug 1998 12:54:03 -0700 ()
From:      Rick Hamell <hamellr@dsinw.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Cable Modems and FreeBSD Question
Message-ID:  <Pine.WNT.3.95.980818125154.-66801A-100000@direct-source.com.direct-source.com>
In-Reply-To: <199808180549.WAA14916@marshotel.coapt.com>

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> >2) What do you guys think about those cheap NE2000 compatible boards that
> >you can get from the Computer Shows?  They any good?  I've looked at a few
> >of those boards and I noticed that none of the boards I looked at had
> 
> I have a few jumperless ne2000s in my machines at home, they're certainly
> more work to set up than a PCI net card, but still pretty straightforward.
> Boot with a dos floppy, run their dos based config proggy, set up the
> IRQ/addresses (I lean towards irq10 address 0x300), save it, then boot to
> FreeBSD.  Set the kernel up with the IRQs you set with the software, and
> you're done... (and stash the floppy in a safe place, as you'll need it
> again)   If this sounds like a pain, I'd spend the extra $20 and get PCI,
> they're much easier.


	I think you'll have a hard time finding jumpered network cards
anymore. I use Kingstons in everything I build and use, with no problems
so far. Plus, they work pretty darn well under other operating systems
too. Heck, I don't even have to set them up with a boot disk or anything,
plug in and start installing FreeBSD.


						Rick


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