I’m working on a home music recording studio and looking to confirm that I can just put some Cat six ethernet cable in my walls and then just add USB-C adapters for some wall plates? This will allow me to connect some USB devices to my computer. Cat6 shielded, right?
I just got my band new laptop and I''m pissed that my Ethernet does fit i just assumed there would be one as I always connect my laptop to Ethernet cable for security reasons.
Hi, I followed your instructions, but after turning off the Wi-Fi on the computer and connecting the ethernet cable via the USB-C adapter, the computer does not detect the network. Do you know what the problem may be
Hi, have you checked if the connection to the router is secure ? Restart your computer, make sure your wi-fi is working and then connect the Ethernet cable.
@@robtechhelp4323 Hi, I tried this and the USB-C port is not coming up as an option in Network and Internet Settings (Windows 10). Do I need to add this adapter somehow? Under Change adapter options, I'm seeing only Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Ethernet 2 and PIA.
We've had Thunderbolt forever. I mean.. even Thunderbolt 3 is faster than the best USB-C. Which is what? USB SuperSpeed 3.2 Gen 2x2 (20Gbps)? Think about that for a minute. Thunderbolt 3 came out in 2013. It did 40Gbps. It plugged in on either side like USB-C. Thunderbolt 3 was capable of delivering 100 watts of power. But no. We were ignoring it and buying boards with USB 2.0 everywhere with maybe 2-4 USB 3.0 slots. USB type A. That was some weird corporation stuff going on that didn't allow Thunderbolt to become popular.
@@kierrinc9218 I mean, it "is", but usb-c was behind by a few years.. But you can't interchange them. Firewire is its own standard. It's just weird because it was around first and always way ahead of whatever USB-type x was out. But it was more of an Apple thing. I assume that's why PC/Android stuck with USB. I've never owned anything Apple, btw.
He answered a question for me that a major computer brand company failed to do with their so-called "Virtual Assistant" online helper that they offer to new buyers for up to 90 days, after a computer purchase, for free. I'm here to tell you, all that "Virtual Assistant" did (or should I say, that computer program) did was ask the same repetitive dumb questions over, and over again in a loop; no matter what my answer was in response to any question. It was like talking to a brick wall, there was no human interaction from their end on such a simple, simple question regarding a portless RJ45 connection, nor any advice moving forward. So with no help, I returned the product to the merchant along with screen prints of the interaction with the Virtual Assistant and received a refund for lack of support on a newly purchased product. Yes, the video creator here is a bit difficult to understand, but it's not that bad considering he went so far as to make the visuals VERY CLEAR and we could see what he was actually talking about as the video progressed. I gave him a thumbs up. Because he's human for one thing, not a robot or computer program, and he knows what he's talking about. And to the company's still trying to accomplish a "LIGHTS OUT" humanless help desk call center in 2022, please, you're a friggin joke, you've been trying to replace humans for decades, it's pathetic and in my case, you've failed miserably.