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2007-12-02
, 12:08
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Posts: 155 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#42
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2007-12-02
, 12:59
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Posts: 19 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#43
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2007-12-02
, 13:24
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#44
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2007-12-02
, 18:40
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Posts: 465 |
Thanked: 149 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#45
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I eyeballed the modules dir where the module is that you use to stop the thing being an USB drive when attached to a PC, and there's nothing much there and certainly nothing recognisable as an ethernet driver. Where else might they hang out? Where do they hang out in 2008?
I don't really want to up to 2008 quite yet...
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2007-12-02
, 20:50
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Posts: 155 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#46
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I switched over as soon as that N810 image got out, and have no regrets, but I'm a big fat dork who doesn't mind messing around, compiling things myself, etc.
What's keeping you from the OS2008 beta?
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2007-12-02
, 21:52
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Posts: 465 |
Thanked: 149 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#47
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I also have a Debian learning curve, I have to have a little time to sit down and find the info on unpacking .debs, then have to play with recompiling so I understand what's going on, once I feel competent at that then I won't mind the upgrading.
Oh, know off hand any good sites on USB cabling? If I do set up an ethernet connection I don't want to mess about with adapters, meaning getting one with a cable (rather than the usb stick kind) and put a suitable mini on the end.
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2007-12-03
, 01:48
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Posts: 155 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#48
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2007-12-03
, 01:52
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#49
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2007-12-03
, 01:58
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Posts: 155 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#50
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Now, if only Citrix produced an ARM Linux client! Then I could take the thing into the dartacentre, do the networky things I have to do, and connect to Citrix to use the mandated IE (ick!) to tell people I'd done it.
Your USB modem connects either via GPRS or via UMTS. Inside this modem, there is a sim card (which the manual, available here calls an R-UIM card. This card identifies your data plan.
Take this card out and pop it in a phone with a bluetooth connection. Then you connect your nokia to the Internet via bluetooth and that phone. I do that regularly.
You could also have asked your provider to put the data plan on the same card than your call plan, this way you can use the phone for both calling and data (even both at the same time on UMTS). It may even be a tiny bit cheaper, since you only need one card and one number.
Now, you said you wanted to do that via wifi. This is also possible, with a dedicated router and the advantage is that you can connect your nokia and your laptop to the net at the same time.
An example of a suitable router is the Linksys WRT54G3G. You put your SIM card (with the data plan) in an UMTS PCMCIA card (which acts as the "phone"), then that card in the router. An example of a suitable PCMCIA card is this one from amazon. Usually, the service provider offers those cards at a discount with the data plan.
Then, the router connects via the card on the Internet over an UMTS connection and builds a wifi network around itself. Around the router you can connect what you want to the wifi network, including the Nokia and your laptop.