Linked by Dedoimedo on Thu 17th Mar 2011 23:17 UTC
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Member since:
2006-10-11
That's great and all, but what about everything else? Do they have the equivalent of a package manager for hardware, where you can hit a website, have it scan your machine, and give you a list (with download links) for all the drivers you need? That's what driveragent.com does on Windows. "
Yes, that's what the previous poster is trying to tell you: it is called "the Linux kernel".
Make sure your USB NIC is supported by Linux out-of-the-box (same as you make sure that your USB NIC is supported by MS Windows out-of-the-box) and you are good. Configure your USB NIC (if you are on DHCP, no further action is required, same as in MS Windows) and hit your local sources.list, add non-free and apt-get the firmware-<your-NIC> or just apt-get firmware-non-free, which will download and install all non-free binary blobs out there. That's all.
BTW, for MS Windows I prefer devid.info