
This driver/utility supports the D-Link DWL-122 Wireless Network Card
Version: 3.0.4 for Windows 2000, Windows XP (32bit)
D-LINK DWL-122 MAC DRIVER DOWNLOAD. By admin Posted in Card Reader. Good luck getting this to work if you’ve bought one – otherwise, I would recommend saving up your cash and purchasing an AirPort card if you can! Thank you for networking with D-Link. Please kinkdly help me if you guys know what’s wrong with it.
You can free and without registration download the drivers, utilities, software, manuals & firmware or BIOS for your D-Link DWL-122 Wireless Network Card on this page. You selected 'D-Link DWA-122 Wireless LAN adapter Driver v.3.0.4'. For your convenience, we have several servers with direct links to the file (if the file does not download, you can choose another server). We'll be very grateful if you put a link to our site on the forum, social network, or on your Internet page. (the link can be copied from the query string of your browser)
All information about the 'D-Link DWA-122 Wireless LAN adapter Driver v.3.0.4' (version, date, description and precaution) for Wireless Network Card D-Link DWL-122:
File size: 201 KB
Version: 3.0.4
Date: 10.04.2003
Download from FTP Server 2
Download from FTP Server 3
Download from FTP Server 4
Download from FTP Server 5
All Supported Wireless Network Cards models for this driver (utility):
For easy searching through the list, press and hold 'Ctrl' and once press 'F' In the field enter the model of the device.
Download the latest drivers for the ATI Radeon / nVidia GeForce:
AMD Graphics Drivers (DESKTOP/MOBILE):
• Windows 7(64bit) Radeon Software Adrenalin 2019 Edition 19.10.1 Highlights (Size: 587.0MB) date 07.10.2019 (download from AMD)
• Windows 10(64bit) Radeon Software Adrenalin 2019 Edition 19.10.1 Highlights (Size: 414.0MB) date 07.10.2019 (download from AMD)
Driver version 19.30.25.10
Windows Driver Store Version 26.20.13025.10004
For more information and a list of supported adapters, see the page of the official AMD website.
Drivers for desktop video cards ATI Radeon R9 200, R7 200, HD 7000, HD 6000, and HD 5000 series:
• Windows 7(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite Omega (14.12) (Size: 212.0MB) date 09.12.2014
Display Driver version 14.501.1003
OpenCL(tm) Driver
Catalyst Control Center
Display Driver version 14.501.1003
OpenCL(tm) Driver
Catalyst Control Center
Display Driver version 14.501.1003
OpenCL(tm) Driver
Catalyst Control Center
Display Driver version 14.501.1003
OpenCL(tm) Driver
Catalyst Control Center
• Windows 7, 8.1(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 14.11.2 Beta (Size: 272.0MB) date 17.11.2014
Other ATI Radeon Display Drivers:
• Windows XP(32/64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 14.4 (Size: 179.0MB) date 25.04.2014
Display Driver ver. 9.00.100
Catalyst Control Center
Display Driver ver. 9.00.300.300
Catalyst Control Center
Supported Products:
AMD Radeon R7 260X
AMD Radeon HD 7790
Display Driver ver. 14.10.1006
OpenCL(tm) Driver ver. 10.0.1348.5
Catalyst Control Center
HydraVision
Display Driver ver. 14.10.1006
OpenCL(tm) Driver ver. 10.0.1348.5
Catalyst Control Center
HydraVision
• Windows XP(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 133.0MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows Vista(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 94.8MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows Vista(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 146.5MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows 7(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 94.8MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows 7(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 146.5MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows 8(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 94.8MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows 8(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 13.1 (Size: 146.5MB) date 17.01.2013
• Windows Vista(32/64bit) Latest Beta Driver 13.2 beta (Size: 187.0MB) date 27.02.2013
• Windows 7(32/64bit) Latest Beta Driver 13.2 beta (Size: 187.0MB) date 27.02.2013
• Windows XP(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite 12.8 (Size: 93.69MB) date 15.08.2012
• Windows XP(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite 12.8 (Size: 132.4MB) date 15.08.2012
• Windows Vista(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 134.69MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows Vista(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 184.34MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows Vista(32/64bit) Latest Beta Driver with .NET 4.0 Support 12.11beta (Size: 223.32MB) date 03.12.2012
• Windows 7(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 134.69MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows 7(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 184.34MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows 7(32/64bit) Latest Beta Driver with .NET 4.0 Support 12.11beta (Size: 223.32MB) date 03.12.2012
• Windows 8(32bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 134.69MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows 8(64bit) Catalyst Software Suite with .NET 4 Support 12.10 (Size: 184.34MB) date 22.10.2012
• Windows 8(32/64bit) Latest Beta Driver with .NET 4.0 Support 12.11beta (Size: 223.32MB) date 03.12.2012
nVidia Display Drivers for AGP series:
• Windows XP(32bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 101.0MB) date 24.07.2012
• Windows XP(64bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 139.0MB) date 24.07.2012
• Windows Vista(32bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 104.0MB) date 24.07.2012
• Windows Vista(64bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 149.0MB) date 24.07.2012
• Windows 7(32bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 104.0MB) date 24.07.2012
• Windows 7(64bit) Catalyst 12.6 Driver for AMD Radeon AGP graphic cards (Size: 149.0MB) date 24.07.2012
nVidia Display Drivers:
• Windows XP(32bit) GeForce Driver Release 335.28 WHQL (Size: 183.0MB) date 17.03.2014
• Windows XP(64bit) GeForce Driver Release 335.28 WHQL (Size: 223.0MB) date 17.03.2014
• Windows Vista/7/8/8.1(32bit) GeForce Driver Release 335.23 WHQL (Size: 219.0MB) date 10.03.2014
• Windows Vista/7/8/8.1(64bit) GeForce Driver Release 335.23 WHQL (Size: 276.0MB) date 10.03.2014
• Windows XP(32bit) GeForce R326 Game Ready Driver Release 327.23 WHQL (Size: 160.0MB) date 19.09.2013
• Windows Vista/7/8(32bit) GeForce R326 Game Ready Driver Release 327.23 WHQL (Size: 182.0MB) date 19.09.2013
• Windows Vista/7/8(64bit) GeForce R326 Game Ready Driver Release 327.23 WHQL (Size: 230.0MB) date 19.09.2013
• Windows XP(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 176.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows Vista(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows Vista(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 210.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows 7(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows 7(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 210.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows 8(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows 8(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.70 WHQL (Size: 210.0MB) date 17.12.2012
• Windows XP(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 177.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows Vista(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows Vista(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 211.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows 7(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows 7(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 211.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows 8(32bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 163.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Windows 8(64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 314.07 WHQL (Size: 211.0MB) date 18.02.2013
• Linux (32bit) ARM Linux ARM Display Driver Release 331.49 (Size: 22.0MB) date 18.02.2014
• Linux (64bit) Linux nVidia Display Driver Release 331.49 (Size: 60.0MB) date 18.02.2014
• Linux (64bit) GeForce/ION Driver Release 310.32 Certified (Size: 65.1MB) date 21.01.2013
nVidia PhysX System Software:
• Windows XP/Vista/7(32/64bit) NVIDIA PhysX System Software v.9.11.1111 (Size: 30.4MB) date 31.01.2012
• Windows XP/Vista/7/8(32/64bit) NVIDIA PhysX System Software v.9.12.1031 (Size: 25.49MB) date 26.11.2012
Microsoft Software:
• DirectX Software Development Kit v.9.29.1962.0 (Size: 571.7MB) date 02.06.2010
Let's say you have an 'old' Mac you want to wirelessly connect to your AirPort network. In my case, it's an eMac. Like me, you probably don't want to buy an expensive AirPort Extreme card. It's worse if you have an old G3 CRT iMac: the already-expensive card needs an exepensive adapter! So you look on the internet for a cheap USB WiFi dongle solution, like many of your PC friends own. They don't make any of these for Macs? D-Link made one two years ago, but its new version (the DWL-G122) doesn't support OS X any more.
Dj khaled videos. So I came across here, which made me purchase it, because the hint (and replies) stated that 'rev B1' of this dongle used a chipset that was Mac-compatible. And that the maker had an OS X driver available on their site.But I quickly was disappointed: I could only use it when I had no password assigned to my wireless network! It just wouldn't work when my WEP encryption was enabled. After much research, and the help of others in the Ralink forums, I found a solution. For those of us with older Macs that only have airport 80211b cards inside there is another way to get to 802.11g speeds that requires no drivers or compromises in security.
Use an Ethernet bridge device. This basically brings an Ethernet port to you wirelessly. You will have to use have an Ethernet port on your Mac but unless your Mac is really old you should have that.
Since you configure the device via a web browser and it uses your Ethernet port you need no extra drivers, just configure your Ethernet port and you are good to go.They are more expensive than USB adapters but starting at around 70 bucks that are not that badly priced. Some like the buffalo have several Ethernet ports so a single bridge can connect several computers, printers, whatever has a port and is within reach of an Ethernet cable from the bridge. Thanks for reviving the old DWL-G122 thread from a year ago and for the excellent summary! There are testimonials to the DWL-G122 at Amazon and numerous dongles for sale on ebay and a real need to sort out what works and what doesn't.Some followup comments and questions:1.
One reason why you might be interested in a USB wireless antenna even if you've got a modern Mac with builtin wireless is that the reception on the Airport cards (at least in a titanium PowerBook like mine) is notoriously weak. There are lots of times when I get little or no reception and my pals with Dell laptops are doing great. I also want a cheap USB wireless device so I can play with gizmos like the famous.2. Thanks for the warning that two antennas in use simultaneously can damage each other. But there's no problem as long as you turn off your built-in antenna before plugging in the USB one, right? Presumably you could avoid the problem by putting the USB antenna at the end of a cable, correct? How long would be far enough?
And doesn't this problem also apply if people on two different laptops are working in close quarters?3. So the Ralink driver trick only works with the B1 version of the G122. What if you can locate an older A1 or A2 version? Will they still work on Mac OS X 10.4? There seem to be plenty of them on ebay, although a lot of the sellers don't say and probably don't know which version they've got. (The ones who do so are trying to cater to TiVo users, who also have dependencies on the G122 version.)4.
Finally, are there any.other. USB wireless antennas which can be scrounged up cheap for use on a Mac? Don't answer that - I'll start another thread.Thanks again!. I've been having a problem with my DWL-G122. Guys, I understand security for your networks, and broadband speeds.But if you 'RTFM', it would be easier to just use 'Access Control' on Airport Express or other routers that use that name, or 'MAC-Address' under security?And you can also just stop broadcasting your SSID along with MAC access control to safegaurd your network.I have never had a break in using this type of security. And your network should work better, not having to encrypt packets.
The router just ignores other client card it does not know. (apartment living and college towns suck.)And 'yes' you can spoof MAC addresses, but you would need to know the list of MAC first, and WEP can be cracked; I did it to all my neighbors, so I could get their attention to change their channels to keep the noise down. Based on the old DWL-G122 thread I purchased a combo pack (with router) and with the rebate got a faily decent deal. Well, that is, if I can get it to work.
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I uninstalled the old DWL-122 which has worked great and then followed the instructions for the G model and nada.no desktop icon.nothing in the network control panel.no lights on the device itself. I tried it twice and gave up. I downloaded the newest driver since I have osx4.5.
So, now I have uninstalled its' driver and reinstalled the old DWL-122.any suggestion?. Hi,My thanks as well for a great write-up on this. I have a 333 MHz iMac from 1999 (tray-loading) that can't take a wireless card, so I wanted something like this to get it on my wireless network (D-Link DI-624 router). I almost went with the DWL-G122 and your hints but it looked a little too iffy for the non-technical users who would be using the iMac.I saw other comments about the Netgear WGE111 Wireless Game Adapter which.does. in fact do WPA (some reports were unclear) and decided to try it out. It was hard to actually find a store that would get one in with a refund-if-fails guarantee, but I did, and it works perfectly as advertised!I hope this helps anyone else looking for a fallback plan.Cheers,-Dick.
Trying to find a cheap wireless solution for my old iMac DV, I picked up a DWL-G122 ver. After reading all of the information above, I first tried installing the Railink drivers and they worked just fine, but they were a bit clunky to work with. I then uninstalled them and installed the ones on the driver CD.
They work perfectly. The installer adds a new preference pane and it also adds a nice signal strength gauge by the clock. A few hints.The dongle will not start up initially until you set your network up in the preference pane.Use a static IP address; When your Mac starts up, the network initialization tries to negotiate a dynamic address before the dongle starts up and you get a random address. Using a static address fixes this.Also, for some reason, the driver(?) will sometimes take up to a minute to load and start the dongle on system startup.I'm running it on an iMac DV and OS 10.3.9. My iBook is a G3 (336 MHz), now updated to OS X 10.3.9 (Panther) with 320 MB total RAM. The guy I was talking to at the computer shop said he has solved the problem of going wireless on an older Mac without a (costly) airport card.His solution is to use the Asus WL330G wireless accesspoint. He connects it to the laptop's Ethernet port via a supplied cable that makes the Mac think it is connected to a LAN.
He then fired up his internet browser and typed in the URL of the WL330G (supplied by the device's documentation), and from which he could make the settings on the WL330G to connect to the area's hot spot. He says the beauty of the setup is there's no software nor driver to install and is compatible with any computer with an Ethernet port.What do you guys think? I'm sorely tempted to go out and buy one but I'd like feedback on this thing first. Some Mac guy told me that this Asus device is not Mac-friendly as far as the settings are concerned.BTW, I found a brand new D-Link DWL-G122 but it's a rev. C1, not a B1.
I'd rather not buy it yet, as I'd like you guys to say if it'll work for me or not. For one, my system administrator may not probably want to change the password on the company machines just to fulfill the requirement for a 13-character password. Just in case he does cooperate, which option do you think is the better choice, if indeed the C1 version is okay for my system?. I guess the problem doesn't come from the dongle itself, but rather from a conflict with certain configurations.
I own an iBook G3 900 and this DWL-G122 rev B1 dongle.Funny enough, the driver worked perfectly for me until I had to connect to a WPA-secured network. I had a delay each time I connected to a server or tried to access a webpage, and that was a major PITA while surfing the web, so I configured my Wifi station (provided by my ISP, not an Apple Base Station) to WEP instead, even if it's said to be less secure.So far, it works fine, the 'Profiles' manager in WirelessUtility.app has no problem at all (I have 3 different networks I connect to regularly), but I did experience some kernel crashes when plugging/unplugging the dongle, or back from sleep.If only RALink would release a software that's not as out of place as this WirelessUtility, though. I'd really like a menu bar like the Airport one. But my laptop is nearly 3 years old and still works like a charm, so I guess I can't complain:). Has anyone else had problems with dropped connections?
I'm working with an iBook, OSX 10.4.x, and Ralink driver 1.1.2.0. Power saving on the computer is off.The whole setup worked fine for a few weeks, now it unexpectedly drops the connection after a minute or two. The only way to reconnect is to stop the radio, unplug it, plug it into the other USB port, then restart the radio. And it disconnects again after a minute or two.On the other end, I have a Belkin router model F5D7230-4, encryption disabled, and MAC filtering on.Can anyone shed a little light on this?Thanks,Beth. I also bought the d-link dongle (ver b1/firmware 2.2) and it works great. It did not come with any mac drivers on the install disk, but it worked well with the downloaded raitek 'drivers.'
I realize this is probably old hat info for most, but OSX does NOT recognize the dongle. You must use the 'Raitek Wireless Utility' program to utilize the dongle, and connect to access points, and it is at least a magnitude better then my iBook G4's built-in Airport Extreme. Since there is no Intel OSx version, the dongle's future is problematic.
I only paid ($15 after a mail-in $25 rebate.), so it's not a big issue. Hi,I purchased the DWL-G122 usb adapter along with a router in a 'wireless starter kit.' The router works great - my roommates have no problems getting online.
However - i received hardware version D1 of the DWL-G122. I followed the instructions about downloading drivers from Ralink, but they do not work. When I called DLink customer support, all they would do was refer me to a company called macwireless.com that sells a USB adapter for $89.
(That's a little pricey for me.) Any tips for the D1 version? I may just have to return it and purchase something else.Thanks!. I have a DWL-G122 working (tested actually) on my eMac, running Tiger 10.4.7, with drivers supplied by D-Link. Although I didn´t get to use WAP, WEP and other security checks, the link capacity worked flawlessly.I see though, that people have been quoting the rev. Bx firmware model. I actually looked for that one, but didn't find it, having read the older posting about using Railink drivers. After several emails with local suppliers, I gave up looking and actually went to a shop to buy one.
To my suprise. There was a Mac OS Logo on the box!!! Mine displays firmware version C1!? (I must admit I live in South America, and we do get odd models down here). Just in case, one of the suppliers assured me that it sports a Railink chip, so these might work for other revisions too.Anyway.
If someone would like to try the drivers that I got with my model, just post a request. Hey everyone.I've got a 1.25 gHz Mac Mini (non Intel) with a gig of RAM. That said, I bought a DWL-G122 yesterday and today, I'm up and running.I followed the steps above exactly.then downloaded and installed the kernel extension for not having to re-plug the unit (link at the end of the article). Once that was done, only then did I choose Add Profile on the Site Survey section of the Ralink software.Now, when I reboot or return from sleep, my connection automatically fires up.Hope that helps someone out there!. Hey everyone I just bought two of the add logix usb wireless adapter and it setup on my old 400 mhz crt g3 imac in minutes with no problems.
It came with mac drivers for panther and tiger. It's called the ADDLOGIX USB 2.0 WIRELESS (IEEE 802.11B/G) ADAPTER, and It was $32.99 from clubmac.com. Pretty good deal I think. I hope this is relavent.here is a link treath others the way I would like to be treated. With respect. After my PowerBook's internal antenna and PC card bay both stopped working, I got a DWL-G122 to get online. Anything to keep this PowerBook alive!
Unfortunately, I find the USBWirelessUtility interface to be absolutely horrendous. Clicks don't always register, the icons remind me of Windows 3.1, tabbing through textfields doesn't work, the list goes on.
I also couldn't help but notice once when USBWirelessUtility launched and froze everything when I was at the OS X login window. I didn't know anything could get past the login window.All that aside, it was cheap and it's given my PowerBook a slightly longer lifespan so I'm willing to bear with many of USBWirelessUtility's shortcomings. The icon had to go, however, and since the app needs to be running all the time for it to work (and is therefore always on my dock), I used a photo from D-Link's marketing materials to make a better application icon. Here it is in case anyone else would like it:(zip, 21.8k).