Are there any differences in performance or any other issues?
in particular i am concerned how can a hub, which plugs into single usb port, extract enough power/bandwidth for 4 ports?? even with ac adapter, how can 4 times as much information be carried through the single usb port used by the hub??
similar question on pcmcia usb extensions - some models seem to need ac power but other do not. are there genuine differences or do the adds simply 'forget' to mention the power supply?
many thanks!
USB hub vs USP PCMCIA card
I'd been considering the same question as you, and then the USB connections on my T41 stopped working as USB2, and would only give USB1.1 (if you read the T board, you'll see this is a not uncommon problem). So I got a USB pc-card, hoping to dodge that problem, and use the old connections for my printer and mouse.
As a plan, it's worked great: I now have six connections, four of them USB2. And working with this, I think it's the better solution: six connections instead of five (the hub steals one on the computer for its own connection); nothing dangling off my computer (this is what kept me from getting a hub, before the problem); better access to the outlets because they're in front and not flopping around. The new card has a power jumper to bring more power over from one of the original USB connections, and that connection on the card will also take a standard AC adapter, if needed, so there's nothing lost there, either. I think, overall, its a better solution than an external hub. In my opinion, of course.
The possible downside is that I hear there are problems with NEC USB card chips working with some computers, and the card I got has an NEC chip (you won't know until you install it). Knowing that, I started by NOT loading the included software as the instructions demanded, just to see if the card would work well without it, and my system is working fine, so I continue to not load the card's software. I don't know if it's working because the reported problem is actually a software one, or because I'm lucky.
As a plan, it's worked great: I now have six connections, four of them USB2. And working with this, I think it's the better solution: six connections instead of five (the hub steals one on the computer for its own connection); nothing dangling off my computer (this is what kept me from getting a hub, before the problem); better access to the outlets because they're in front and not flopping around. The new card has a power jumper to bring more power over from one of the original USB connections, and that connection on the card will also take a standard AC adapter, if needed, so there's nothing lost there, either. I think, overall, its a better solution than an external hub. In my opinion, of course.
The possible downside is that I hear there are problems with NEC USB card chips working with some computers, and the card I got has an NEC chip (you won't know until you install it). Knowing that, I started by NOT loading the included software as the instructions demanded, just to see if the card would work well without it, and my system is working fine, so I continue to not load the card's software. I don't know if it's working because the reported problem is actually a software one, or because I'm lucky.
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