Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver
USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter USB-A Male, 10/100/1000 Mbps, USB 3.0, XP, Vista,7,8, Mac OS X, Linux Expands Ultrabooks, Netbooks, Notebooks, PCs, Macbooks Pro and Macbooks Air to an RJ-45 network connection. Data transfer rates of up to 1000 Mbps. Adds an extra LAN port to devices (PC, notebook, and so on).
- Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver Downloads Windows 7
- Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver User Manual Download
- Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver For Server 2012
Small, compact housing – suitable for mobile use At speeds up to 5 Gb/s USB 3.0 quickly becoming the new standard for data transmission technology for PCs and laptops. Latest computer have a 10/100 Ethernet connection, while Macbooks Air, Ultrabooks, Subnotebooks, etc. Have no more any Ethernet ports. The existing USB 2.0 gigabit Ethernet adaptors are limited by the USB 2.0 standard on a maximum data transfer speed of 480 MB/s, while our DIGITUS® gigabit Ethernet USB 3.0 adaptor reaches speeds of 1000 Mb/s. Due to his low power consumption of 200 mA, the adaptor can be used even with a Macbook Pro and Macbook Air without any problems.
Technical Details. Compliant to USB 3.0 specification, downward compatible with USB 2.0 and USB 1.1. IEEE 802.3, 802.3u, 802.3ab, 802.3az (10BASE-T/100BASE-TX/1000BASE-T) compatible. Supports both full-duplex with flow control and half-duplex with backpressure operation. Supports Wake-On-LAN.
Low power consumption, only 200 mA. 1 x RJ-45 port, 1x USB A plug. Supports advanced link down power saving when Ethernet cable is unplugged. Supports Windows 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista, XP and Mac OS 10.x Package content. Gigabit Ethernet USB 3.0 Adapter.
Driver CD. Logistics.
Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver Downloads Windows 7
Hi, First of all thank for the advice:D So, i have a DN-3023 because now i'm working in the university bunker without WLAN:-( Under Windows work very well, under ubuntu work but with a lot of disconnection. Have you some idea about? Driver: AX88179178ALINUXDRIVERv1.4.0SOURCE but i tried also v1.3 Perhaps it is useful to see the logs present in the link below. The first one it's about 10 minut log, the second one it's a two day filtred by disconnetion. Thank you.:D.
Under Windows work very well, under ubuntu work but with a lot of disconnection. Have you some idea about? Driver: AX88179178ALINUXDRIVERv1.4.0SOURCE but i tried also v1.3 Perhaps it is useful to see the logs present in the link below. The first one it's about 10 minut log, the second one it's a two day filtred by disconnetion. Beyond the obvious (the usb device disconnects) I cannot see what the reason for this behavior could be (the logs don't say it).
Maybe it is best to get in contact with the developer(s) of the driver and check what goes wrong: Freddy Xin (freddy AT asix DOT com DOT tw). Furthermore, it would be great if you could try to reproduce the problem on a usb2 plug and/or another laptop. In case anyone in the future reads this, the driver has been merged (into the mainline kernel.
If you are running 3.9 (still not released at the time of writing) or later, the driver is included out of the box. Beyond the obvious (the usb device disconnects) I cannot see what the reason for this behavior could be (the logs don't say it). Maybe it is best to get in contact with the developer(s) of the driver and check what goes wrong: Freddy Xin (freddy AT asix DOT com DOT tw). Furthermore, it would be great if you could try to reproduce the problem on a usb2 plug and/or another laptop. In case anyone in the future reads this, the driver has been merged (into the mainline kernel. If you are running 3.9 (still not released at the time of writing) or later, the driver is included out of the box. I'm texting rigth now to Freddy Xin.
My notebook have not USB2:-( and on my desktops (home and work) i have only windows, i don't know if it's the same try with a live distro. P.s.: I have tried to analize the time between disconnections without results. So it's not time-dependent.
I see many people reporting success with this device under Linux but unfortunately this is not the case for me on Ubuntu 12.10 and 13.04 on a Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition. I compile the driver (v1.4.0) without any problems (make, make install), I load it using modprobe and I see it as eth2. I can even see some RX/TX traffic but it cannot acquire an IP address so it is unusable. @CyberAngel: Stupid question, but maybe it is a good idea to rule out a hardware problem first: does the device work on another laptop and/or under Windows? If this is the case, I would suggest to contact the developer of the driver (Freddy Xin, contact details are mentioned above) directly. I haven't tried this specific Digitus device, but I have tried an STLab USB 3.0 Docking Station (which provides 3 USB 3.0 ports + 1 Gigabit Ethernet port based on this chipset) and a Startech USB 3.0 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter.
Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver User Manual Download
Both of them behave the same. I am going to try it now on different hardware with Ubuntu 12.04 (USB 2.0 Ports on the motherboard though) and see if it works. I tested with 3.9 and 3.10.1 kernel from but still no luck:/ Same weird behavior. Recognised, dmesg shows link is up at 1000Mbps, the packet counter of ifconfig increases and then the error counter increases as well:( Exact same problem here as well on my office network. Connects perfectly fine on a Win7 (non XPS13) box, but no luck on 13.04 with 3.10 kernel. It does get as far as establishing a 1Gbps connection, obtaining the correct IP, gateway and DNS servers via DHCP (exactly same as on Win7), but after that, it can't ping any of them nor resolve any addresses.
That said, it works perfectly fine on my home network, also via DHCP (but at 100mbps as that's the limit of my router) - but haven't found any kernel option to force 100mbps in case that's related to this issue. Hah, and just like that I guessed correctly!
Digitus Ethernet Network Usb Adapter Driver For Server 2012
After forcing 100mbps mode, it now connects perfectly fine. Try running this command to force 100mbps on the current connection (be sure to choose the correct eth interface): sudo ethtool -s eth1 speed 100 duplex full antoneg off No need to connect/reconnect - it should start working immediately. You can switch back to 1Gbps with: sudo ethtool -s eth1 speed 1000 duplex full antoneg off.which in my case returned it back to it's original non-functional state.