<erikkugel>
yup. apperently (and maybe you are right and I'm making no sense) one can run anything over CAT5. I know I have an APC BackUPS uninterrupted power-supply which connects to the UPS with an Ethernet jack and to the workstation with a USB jack for monitoring. I'm looking for that page right now.
<wpwrak>
oh, you can run anything over CAT5. but you still have to connect like to like. USB to USB or Ether to Ether :)
<wpwrak>
yes, that's still USB to USB. just with a CAT5 cable in the middle. is that what you're looking for ?
<wpwrak>
before, you wrote about a USB port to an Ethernet port. that requires a relatively complex conversion circuit (i.e., a USB Ethernet dongle) and driver support
<erikkugel>
I naively assumed that the adapters for Ethernet to USB ( http://www.nextag.com/usb-to-rj45-adapter/stores-html ) were "dumb" and I could just make one by wiring the cables myself. I think you are saying that this wont work?
<wpwrak>
well, that's USB host -> Ether. Ether -> USB device is even harder.
<wpwrak>
they're not dumb ;-)
<erikkugel>
Are you saying that they have some chip inside doing the conversion, or you just want to avoid insulting them?
<erikkugel>
thanks for the explanation, by the way. I have 0 background, as you can tell :)
<wpwrak>
well, the one for $6 seems to be dumb. but that's again USB-VAT5-USB, no Ether in there
<erikkugel>
You are right about a USB host being on the USB end.
<erikkugel>
in all cases.
<erikkugel>
so in theory, if one had to do this, they would have to write new drivers for their Ethernet card to get it to talk to a USB slave, bacuse, it takes USB host drivers to talk to a USB slave which Ethernet does not have?
<wpwrak>
some of them may have drivers for the USB signals. but that's probably all at the physical layer, basically signal amplifiers.
<wpwrak>
no, you need a device that talks Ethernet on one end and USB host on the other. plus a driver for driving the ethernet end.
<wpwrak>
better to free up some USB port. or add a hub.
<erikkugel>
I see. this makes more sense now... So, I can make such a cable myself to connect my ADSL modem from its Etheren jack to a PC's USB port, but I cannot do much with the nanonote because USB required a USB host which I will not have with a nanonote+ethernet combo.
<wpwrak>
you can't connect USB host (PC) to Ether (ADSL modem) directly either. you need an USB-to-Ethernet dongle for it. but yes, they're relatively simple (probably just one major chip), so you could in theory make one yourself.
<wpwrak>
but then, USB-to-Ether dongles are inexpensive, so why bother :)
<wpwrak>
(i don't know what the driver situation is like, though. maybe that needs some attention.)
<erikkugel>
I see, I can make one but I will need to buy a little board which has a chip in it and input for both ethernet and usb cabling/jacks. One last question, and I know I went beyond the Nanonote here :) - will it work on Linux, or is this what you mean by "driver situation" - it might require some proprietary software to talk to that chip?
<wpwrak>
there are USB-to-ether dongles that work on linux. i don't know how likely it is for a dongle you pick up at the next computer shop to "just work", though
<erikkugel>
I see, well, I'm going to hit google for the rest of it, but I really can't thank you enough for your patience and clear explanation!
<whitequark>
wpwrak: remember I've been talking about digikey, billing/shipping/passport address and so on. They've delivered it last night nevertheless. Looks like the scan of passport was convincing enough.