
The only thing I care about is compatibility with Linux, and I am happy to report that I plugged this thing into the motherboard yesterday, and it appears to work perfectly without installing anything. I didn't even install the drivers that came on the CD. I have only owned this thing one day, but things are good so far. Immediately after plugging in the card and booting up, I was able to use 'ip address' to see the card present (but no IP, since I hadn't set up networking obviously). Then, I edited /etc/netplan/_your_config.yaml with my wifi configuration. I ran sudo netplan --debug apply and the interface did not appear to pickup an IP address. The output of 'ip address' showed that the state of the interface was 'down', so I though I might have been missing firmware, so I messed around for a while trying to get my sources.list set up for 'contrib' and 'non-free', but turned out to not be necessary. I did install a few debugging tools, but I don't think any of them contributed to making it work. I was using 'connmanctl' command to debug the interface when I realized that it was already connected and working perfectly. I think my problem was not rebooting after running the netplan apply. Here is my kernel version/stack: uname -a Linux host 5.15.0-43-generic #46-Ubuntu SMP Tue Jul 12 10:30:17 UTC 2022 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux lsb_release -a No LSB modules are available. Distributor ID: Ubuntu Description: Ubuntu 22.04.1 LTS Release: 22.04 Codename: jammy (server version) I observed transfer speeds of 17.7 MB/s, which is more than enough for my needs.



Worked out of box for Windows 10 Professional. I have several wireless adapters that Windows 10 seems to have a problem with. Plugged it in and Windows 10 installed driver. Wireless was up and running in less than a minute. Running for over a month now without any issues. Wireless speed seems decent and haven't had any disconnects. Very small, does not take up any room around the USB port. Good signal - get full signal in any room in the house.



![[10 PCS] RT 5370 mini USB WiFi with Ralink RT5370 chip 150Mbps 2.4GHz IEEE 802.11b/g/n standard USB2.0 Wireless mini USB Adapter [10 PCS] RT 5370 mini USB WiFi with Ralink RT5370 chip 150Mbps 2.4GHz IEEE 802.11b/g/n standard USB2.0 Wireless mini USB Adapter](https://c1.neweggimages.com/productimage/nb300/ARFAD200828SHE89.jpg)

I plugged the card into an appropriate slot on the ASUS motherboard, connected the antennas, and powered up computer. I went into the WiFi settings and selected the band I wanted, and bingo, it was up and running. I updated the driver using the Device Manager and I am getting a full speed 5.2 connection.




Easy to replace and getting full (from provider) wifi speed now.

Works really well, drivers auto installed and was able to connect everything just fine. Haven't used the wifi part as I use a wired desktop setup but otherwise is awesome. Works better than the USB options I've used and it connected just fine. Same as any other m.2 stuff. No idea of this works with newer cnvi ports. Using on an 8th gen Intel system.

- Easy setup. Used in OPNSense setup on a custom system. Recognized without issue.


no need driver installation, my W10 pro auto identify it after plug into USB 3.0 port.


great product, works as advertised Easy install
