At a very basic level; simply running Linux on the PPC architecture,
including Apple [1] Powermacs and so on.
List of Supported Hardware [2]
Has both a 32 and 64bit [3] flavour, and is supported by most popular
distributions (Debian, Gentoo, Mandrake, Red Hat, SuSE [4] to name a
few).
Reports are good for most wireless cards, as most i386 things can be
tinkered with to work on PPC.
Adding Wavelan/Airport/Cabletron/Enterasys PCMCIA support to
Linux/PPC [5]
* Latest Kernel Source [6]
* Penguin PPC [7]
Links:
------
[1] http://melbournewireless.org.au/?Apple
[2] http://penguinppc.org/projects/hw/
[3] http://penguinppc64.org/
[4] http://melbournewireless.org.au/?SuSE
[5]
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=linux/ppc+pcmcia&hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&selm=linux-ppc.140D21516EC2D3119EE700902787664401439FE2%40hplex1.hpl.hp.com&rnum=6
[6] http://penguinppc.org/dev/kernel.shtml
[7] http://penguinppc.org/
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