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So ok I checked the Wiki when upgrading to Snow Leopard 10.6 for possible wireless cards that would work. Well sure enough I had the DWL-G520 rev.B in an older system. So I installed Snow Leopard today, with the card installed. Got it booted up and there is nothing showing under the wireless or modems in the system profiler. But according to the Wiki it says the......

 

Interface sort_none.gif Standard sort_none.gif Device sort_none.gif Manufacturer sort_none.gif Notes sort_none.gif Fully Working w/o Patch sort_down.gif

 

PCI b/g DWL-G520 rev.B D-Link only x32 vanilla driver yes

 

is fully working out of the box without a patch. Well this is not true cause I have the wireless card installed in my system and it does not work. It has worked just fine when I boot over to Windows 7. So in that case, what am I going to need to do in order to get this wireless card to work for me?

 

Thank you.

Wow no one has a clue? All kinds of hits for this card when you do a search, but no one says how they get it to work. Also how can I update the Wiki to correct the mistake on the forum? It needs to be changed as the card does not work with Snow Leopard right out of the box.

 

I've updated the Wiki with the correct information. This card does not work for Snow Leopard 10.6. Thanks to the {censored} that posted the wrong information and wasted a lot of my time.

Umm are you in 32 bit mode? what bootloader and which boot flags

 

How would I know if I am in 32 or 64 bit mode. Also no idea what you mean about the bootloader and which boot flags. I do know I used the lifehacker install and process if that helps any. Thanks for any help at all, I am stuck.

Bring up About This Mac/More Info and click on Software on the left column. It will say Yes to 64 bit Kernel and Kexts if you're running 64 bit, which isn't supported by the driver. Use google to find out how to run in 32 bit mode.

Bring up About This Mac/More Info and click on Software on the left column. It will say Yes to 64 bit Kernel and Kexts if you're running 64 bit, which isn't supported by the driver. Use google to find out how to run in 32 bit mode.

 

So yes it says 64 bit kernel and extensions. I googled how to run in 32 bit mode. I held down the "3" and "2" during boot, but it appears it's still booting in 64 bit mode after trying it.

I cannot get the system to boot in 32 bit mode. I tried holding down the keys, I also downloaded a utility that let's me switch back and forth from 32 and 64 bit, nothing. Still says Yes in the 64 kit kernel and extensions section of the software.

add this to your com.apple.Boot.plist

 

<key>Kernel Flags</key>

<string>arch=i386</string>

 

I put this right under the last entry, but before the closing, and now it brings up the Apple logo, the circle spins, and then it stops at the top, system won't boot into Leopard now.

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