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Hey, I've been running XBMC Live (or XBMCbuntu now, I should say) for a few years with my network adapter plugged directly into my Acer Aspire Revo 1600. We're moving to a new place where that won't be possible so I'm looking into a wireless USB networking solution. I've seen some posts about models that people have had trouble with so I was wondering if there were any particular recommended models I should be looking for? Any recommendations on ones that work quickly out of the box would be great!
Thanks in advance...
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Oh wow, I had no idea such technology existed. That's pretty awesome. I may try that.
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The manufacturer and model number are not really important. The thing you need to find with the usb dongle is the chipset. I am running a Jetway nettop pc with an Atheros internal wireless N adaptor, advertised to run at 150 MbPS. I could only get maybe 70 MbPS with it. I bought a cheap ($9.50 with free shipping) 300 MbPS N adaptor from Newegg. I blacklisted the internal wireless chip and was able to get this new one working with no conflicts. It has this chipset:
Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTL8191S WLAN Adapter
It was a pain to setup and I got acceptable performance with XBMCbuntu 10.10. I had occasional buffering (maybe once per movie), and the link quality averaged 82/100. I installed xbmc Eden RC2. After blacklisting the internal wireless chip, RC2 found the usb wireless and it was a breeze to configure. I now have an average link quality of 96/100 and no buffering.
I am sharing, via nfs, music and video over this wireless link. My thumbnails are on another wireless nfs share. I also have the music library and video library running on a remote mysql server over this same wifi link. All is well.
I recommend you read the specifications while you shop for a usb N dongle. From experience I can highly recommend the RTL8191S usb dongles.
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There's nothing better supported on Linux than the Atheros AR92xx chip (ath9k driver). TP-Link has a few sticks that use them, but you should always check the revision you're getting, since chips can change between revisions (different chip or even different manufacturer).
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Thanks to you both. I'll see what I can find with those type of options.
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You're very unlikely to be happy with wireless streaming HD video, except maybe 5Ghz N with no major obstructions. You really want MOCA (network over coax cable) or powerline (network over your power cables).
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If you want to bridge, monoprice sells two very well reviewed wireless routers that also have bridging functionality. For those that don't know... The router is placed in bridge mode, and can join a wireless network just like a laptop would, and then the network is fed out the ethernet ports. The device (such as HTPC, Receiver, BluRay player, etc.) doesn't know the difference, it just sees a working network connection, when in fact it is passing over the WiFi network.
I use DDWRT at home, and it's great, but if you are only after bridging functionality, those devices I mentioned above are the cheapest I've seen it for (even considering the dedicated bridge hardware for xboxes, etc.) and you get multiple ports for several devices in your entertainment center. ($19 : 150Mbps or $24 : 300Mbps)
Hope that helps
-Jason
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If the original poster wants to stream Full HD Blu-Ray rips, then there's only one sane solution, and that's a wired network. Powerline might work, but you have to be lucky with the adapter and the electric wiring; same goes for wireless - all your devices have to support the full 802.11n spec (be it 2,4 GHz or 5 GHz) and signal conditions have to be excellent.
* MikroTik RB5009UG+S+IN :: ZyXEL GS1900-8HP v1 :: EAP615-Wall v1 :: Netgear GS108T v3 running OpenWrt 23.05
* LibreELEC 11:
HTPC Gigabyte Brix GB-BXA8-5545 with
CEC adapter, Sony XR-64A84K ::
Desktop AMD Ryzen 7 5800X / Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon 6700XT / 27" Dell U2717D QHD
* Debian Bookworm x86_64: Celeron G1610, NFS/MariaDB/ZFS server
*
Blog
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5Ghz maybe, if it's not too far away (5Ghz has much less range). 2.4Ghz is very unlikely to work streaming HD in an urban area with lots of other transmitters in range.
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1) Find random USB adaptor
2) Google: <random adaptor> works on on Ubuntu?