>
> As for “$1 devices”, my Sabrent hub cost $36.99 before tax. I am curious
> where one goes for a “real” hub (at least 7 ports) — although somehow I
> have a hunch that there are many different definitions of “real” out
> there.
>
I tend to go by manufacturer respectability rather than price.
I have experienced similar issues with "no name" hardware, that permits
an attempt at what constitutes "real".
1. If there are standards (e.g.,
On Fri, Feb 12, 2021 at 10:37:11AM -0800, Konstantin Olchanski wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 04:17:46PM -0500, Stephen L. Talbott wrote:
> >
> > Is there an reason why a rather vanilla SL-7.9 system might report “4
> > ports detected” on a new, Sabrent 7-port, powered USB 3.0 hub (HB-BUP7)?
>
On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 04:17:46PM -0500, Stephen L. Talbott wrote:
>
> Is there an reason why a rather vanilla SL-7.9 system might report “4
> ports detected” on a new, Sabrent 7-port, powered USB 3.0 hub (HB-BUP7)?
>
Some of these usb switches have interesting internal structure (separate usb2
On 2/11/21 1:17 PM, Stephen L. Talbott wrote:
Greetings —
Is there an reason why a rather vanilla SL-7.9 system might report “4
ports detected” on a new, Sabrent 7-port, powered USB 3.0 hub (HB-BUP7)?
Memory sticks are recognized only in 4 ports. (I just now checked one of
the other three for
Greetings —
Is there an reason why a rather vanilla SL-7.9 system might report “4
ports detected” on a new, Sabrent 7-port, powered USB 3.0 hub (HB-BUP7)?
Memory sticks are recognized only in 4 ports. (I just now checked one of
the other three for charging use, and it did appear, at least