If I recall correctly, the n10's SD slot does not support SDIO, so you will want to find a wifi card in the CF form factor that has drivers for WM2003 (drivers for PPC2002 may also work but no guarantee). I remember being able to successfully use DLink, Linksys, and Ambicom CF wifi cards (with the appropriate drivers installed of course) on WM2003 devices. Your CF slot supports both Type I and Type II cards, so you don't need to worry about that particular specification. Most makers keep driver archives available on their web sites so if the appropriate drivers are not distributed with your desired card, check the maker's site to see if WM2003 drivers are available for download.
The other thing to check is the wifi version(s) supported by your network's wireless router. Is it 802.11b, g, n, or a combination? You will need to make sure the CF card you select is in a protocol that your router supports. A CF card that supports only b will not connect to a router that supports only g or n. The most common routers tend to support both b and g protocols, though connecting a b device often slows a switchable router to b speed for all its active wireless connections.
YankeeJeep
Moderator
If I recall correctly, the n10's SD slot does not support SDIO, so you will want to find a wifi card in the CF form factor that has drivers for WM2003 (drivers for PPC2002 may also work but no guarantee). I remember being able to successfully use DLink, Linksys, and Ambicom CF wifi cards (with the appropriate drivers installed of course) on WM2003 devices. Your CF slot supports both Type I and Type II cards, so you don't need to worry about that particular specification. Most makers keep driver archives available on their web sites so if the appropriate drivers are not distributed with your desired card, check the maker's site to see if WM2003 drivers are available for download.
The other thing to check is the wifi version(s) supported by your network's wireless router. Is it 802.11b, g, n, or a combination? You will need to make sure the CF card you select is in a protocol that your router supports. A CF card that supports only b will not connect to a router that supports only g or n. The most common routers tend to support both b and g protocols, though connecting a b device often slows a switchable router to b speed for all its active wireless connections.
brewster319
thanks i belive the wireless router is a berkin and does support both