- #MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER INSTALL#
- #MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER DRIVERS#
- #MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER DRIVER#
- #MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER FULL#
I have personnaly used this exact adapter on an iMac, a MacBook Pro, a Mac Mini (Dual Boot w/ Win 7) and a Surface Pro 3. If having both OS X and Windows 10 support is important, consider getting a USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter. Thought they should work with Windows 10, it is not guaranteed.
#MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER DRIVER#
Note: Again, these instructions and driver downloads are for Windows 7. You may need to reboot again with the adaptor plugged into the Thunderbolt port to finish the job
#MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER DRIVERS#
#MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER INSTALL#
Windows should automatically detect the adaptor now and install it.
Unzip the drivers to a temporary folder on your hard drive (preferably your Desktop so it's easy to find) inf file does include the requisite driver entries
Thunderbolt or Thunderbolt 2 If you're using a Thunderbolt or Thunderbolt 2 cable with your Apple Thunderbolt Display or other device, use the Apple Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 Adapter. It will say that it's not supported, but the. If you're using an Ethernet cable with your device, use a USB-C to Ethernet adapter, such as the Belkin USB-C to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter. I have condensed them here for quick reference:ĭownload the Netxtreme Mobile/Desktop Driver. There's really no practical need for what you're asking for since the devices you linked to have all the performance you'd want.This is for Windows 7, but should work for Windows 10Ī quick search on the Apple Support site, I was able to find instructions on downloading the correct driver. I guess you understand what I'm getting at.
#MAC ETHERNET TO THUNDERBOLT ADAPTER FULL#
There were some companies that configured a USB 2.0 compliant core with larger processes and lower performing transceivers, and used "USB 2.0 full speed" in on the label. They had an additional 480 Mbit/sec "high speed", but the nomenclature from USB 1.1/1.0 was that 12 Mbit/sec was "full speed".
I do remember when there was the issue with USB 2.0.
Small and compact, it connects to the Thunderbolt port on your Mac computer and provides an RJ-45 port that supports 10/100/1000BASE-T networks. It's kind of like, what would be gained by having a Thunderbolt 2 specific adapter when the original Thunderbolt is perfectly capable (with the max ethernet speed) and the product is backwards compatible. Get it now The Apple Thunderbolt to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter lets you easily connect to a high-performance Gigabit Ethernet network. Or: Kanex Thunderbolt-to-Gigabit Ethernet + USB 3.0 Adapter - Appleīoth of those should work with a Thunderbolt 2 port. i was referring to something more along the lines of this: : Apple Thunderbolt Gigabit Ethernet Adapter (MD463LL/A): Computers & Accessories Thanks for response! yeah, i meant to mention that i did see some "dock" or large devices that would do the trick, but that kind of defeats the purpose of the mobility of a notebook.