![]() ![]() No, this isn’t an 802.11ac solution, but driver support for 802.11ac adapters on legacy gear is mostly confined these days to anything which at least is running Mavericks. But it does work pretty well for that application - probably more so than the reception and transmitting power of a USB dongle counterpart. (I’ve since taken it out since I have the router next to the G5 and can use the LAN instead). If you can track down one of the many 802.11n USB dongles, or you happen to have a PCI slot (not PCIe) free, there is an 802.11n tri-antenna (MIMO) card known as Edimax EW-7728ln which I’ve used for a couple of years on my G5. Equipped with driver CD, easy installation process, easy surfing. ![]() I have an RTL8812BU USB dongle which I’d hoped to use on an iBook G4, but exhausted all avenues after discovering the “10.5” drivers were never written for PowerPC Macs or as Universal Binaries. Buy Card Usb Card- Band Network Wireless NetCard RTL8812BU USB3.0 Adaptor Dual. Open terminal and type this command sudo spctl -master-disable Then you can find the anywhere option on the Security & Privacy page. ![]() What we’ve learnt over the last little while on here is the Realtek 802.11ac cards, adapters, and so on did, for a very limited span (up until around 2013), provide drivers for 10.5, but what their documentation elided to mention was they wrote the drivers only for Intel Macs. Give the APP authority in order to installed on Mac. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |