All the USB drivers are in the usb/ subdirectory. Finding out for sure which specific devices are supported can be difficult one simple approach is to look in /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/kernel/drivers/net/ for drivers. Some companies (Intel) put extra effort into making sure their hardware works under Linux (sometimes before Windows drivers are released the members of their development teams I've talked with have been excited to support Linux). In general, it is best to buy devices after finding out their level of support. Ndiswrapper (a tool that provides enough Windows APIs to let Windows drivers run under Linux) doesn't mention your device on their supported devices list. One user on that forum suggests the RALinkTech driver "RT3572USB" will function for your device, but suggests it will be an annoyance. It doesn't look like Cisco cares about supporting Linux on that specific device:
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