Yes, it can. Two wireless cards might work under the same driver if they both have the same chip.
Wireless Yes Wireless is what requires a driver. Because the circuitry in a wireless keyboard is different as it must send data wirelessly, meaning the computer must know the receiver has a way to accept and convert the signal into usable data for the computer to display. That knowledge is called a driver.
Yes.
Wireless - jazzmarazz13
Many wireless adapters work with Windows 7. If the product does not have an explicit Windows 7 driver, the Vista driver should still work.
It is only for the internet, any other signal usage will not work with this wireless network card.
No. With the exception of wireless card drivers, Linux cannot use Windows drivers. Even then, it should only be done as a last resort.
No they do not. They simply have to work on a compatible frequency. Such as wireless a, b, g etc.
ndiswrapper in an app that fools the wireless windows driver to work with linux.
If you have wireless, no
Yes, you would have to purchase a USB, PCI, or PCI-X wireless device/card.
It means your Netgear wireless router or Netgear wireless card (your computer) are too far from one another for the wireless connection to work.
Are you asking if the computer will get internet? If so... Yes. as long as the router is connected to a modem via network cable and also connected to the desktop computer via network cable.The computer will not connect to the wireless signal sent out by the router. Without a wireless card, it will only work if it is hard patched via network cable to a working modem. If you are asking if the wireless router will still work, even when its connected to a desktop computer with out a wireless card, the answer is also yes. and i this situation, a wireless card in the computer is completely irrelevant so I'm guessing this is not what you meant.