Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: usb as a network card or modem?  (Read 2190 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline danbeaver

Re: usb as a network card or modem?
« on: May 09, 2013, 09:46:10 PM »
A1200 wireless PCMCIA cards do work once hours are wasted getting it set up properly. USB Ethernet Dongles can give faster through put depending on the USB device. The Poseidon 4.4 stack supports wired devices up to 1000 Mb/s based on the Asix device, but the most I get is about 250Kb/s, twice what I get from a standard 10 Mb/s Ethernet device.  I use a Zuni wireless bridge ($30 online) on occasion. The USB devices' are easy to set up. I have never seen a USB modem, but I'm sure they exist. Don't know if the USB stack supports them, never checked.
« Last Edit: May 09, 2013, 09:48:10 PM by danbeaver »
 

Offline danbeaver

Re: usb as a network card or modem?
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2013, 05:30:26 PM »
Quote from: AAACHIPSET;734412
what software  is required to setup a usb network?..to a pc?

I've never heard of being networked by USB alone.  I used to have a USB transfer cable to get files from one PC to another.  The Lemon64 site has a Serial port to some device way of networking (see Heather, AKA "SkyDivingGirl" for info), and of course there is ParNet using the PAR device;  you can find info on the latter in connecting to a PC's internet connection.  There was a Token-Ring like device sold about 15 years ago that connected Amiga's thru the floppy port.

I guess Chris Hodges would know if networking thru a USB port without a NIC was possible.  In my mind you would have to "Null Modem" the I/O lines, setup a TCP/IP stack that used the USB connection and write a device driver that assumed the USB port was treated like an Ethernet port.  Simply changing a line in the DEVS:Config.nsd file would not work i'm afraid.  So this would be a large endeavour as there is no PC/MAC equivalent; not being much up on Linux, I don't know if they have tried this option.  While speeds could be faster that a SER, PAR and standard 10/100 NIC, the new software would require deft programming skills to rewrite the Stack, the device driver, and other "glue."  Then there is the problem of the "Router" and issue of connecting to the Modem -- cable modems have a USB port, but they by-pass the ability of putting the modem on your Ethernet network by being tied to the host PC.
« Last Edit: May 10, 2013, 05:34:16 PM by danbeaver »
 

Offline danbeaver

Re: usb as a network card or modem?
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2013, 05:39:08 PM »
Quote from: nicholas;734416
You need to install CardPatch and CardReset into C: and put them in s:startup-sequence.

http://aminet.net/package/util/boot/CardPatch
http://aminet.net/package/util/boot/CardReset

That will get the card available, but then you need its device driver in the DEVS:Networks directory, a TCP/IP stack that recognizes the card, and then configure the device to be accepted onto your wireless network (my issue).  Obviously a wired NIC card removes the last issue.  Of course if you then use a wireless bridge, it has to be pre-configured to the desired functions that you need. :sealed: