Gigaware Usb To Ethernet Windows 7 Driver

Gigaware Usb To Ethernet Windows 7 Driver 5,8/10 1966 votes

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Gigaware 2503584 USB to Ethernet Adapter. Rate: 10/100 MBPS; Compatible with Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows XP, and Mac OS 10.5 and above.

I have a USB headset (made by Gigaware) which has been working fine for years in my Win 7 machine. But now the device shows up as 'C-media USB headset' in the 'unknown' devices part of Device Manager with no drivers and any automatic search is unable to find the drivers. Note, the driver always listed as 'C-media USB Headset'. My hunch is that either PNP is not working fully--uninstalling and re-inserting does put the device back into the unknown part. Or driver files are not being found online.

I have downloaded software from cmedia.com.tw but those did not work. Also, note I never needed any installation media nor were they supplied. The headphone is fine--works fine in my Windows 8 Acer W510 tablet. May be I could delete some registry key and/or some driver dll files to remove some caching to start from scratch but don't know which files to delete? * Some more info On all the USB Ports not only is the headphone is recognized as 'C-media' but also, for some months, my Nokia Lumia 920 is not being recognized as a device--the phone used to.

So, perhaps, there is some PnP issue?*** Any idea? Figured out the problem: It was the USB mouse in my computer which was the culprit. While the mouse itself worked fine it was disrupting other USB devices to work. Specifically, my Nokia Lumia 920 phone, which was recognized before, stopped being recognized while connected via a micro USB cable. Similarly, the C-media Headphone device started showing as an 'unknown device'. I replaced the mouse with another USB mouse, and voila!, computer not only recognizes the Lumia 920 (though I had to download some software for that) but also the C-Media headset started showing correctly.

BTW, another user had reported similar problem elsewhere on the web, related to his/her mouse crashing. That gave me the clue. @Karan: Thanks for your help again.

Welcome to BleepingComputer, a free community where people like yourself come together to discuss and learn how to use their computers. Using the site is easy and fun. As a guest, you can browse and view the various discussions in the forums, but can not create a new topic or reply to an existing one unless you are logged in. Other benefits of registering an account are subscribing to topics and forums, creating a blog, and having no ads shown anywhere on the site. Or read our to learn how to use this site. The network adapter on my desktop stopped working, and it has no PCI slots, so I picked up a Gigaware 'USB to Ethernet Adapter' from RadioShack. There's no product number, just the name.

Usb

Using this adapter I'm unable to connect to the internet (Windows 7), while another computer using the same Ethernet cable connects just fine. The troubleshooter tells me the adapter ('Local Area Connection 2') 'doesn't have a valid IP configuration.'

I have tried setting the IP and DNS manually. If I do so it still doesn't work, and the troubleshooter cannot identify the problem. I have tried using the same adapter on a laptop. The laptop had the exact same problem, being unable to connect, until I turned the Wi-Fi on.

At that point, for some reason, having the Wi-Fi for our network on allowed the adapter to auto-configure itself to connect to the same network. Now, when used with the laptop, the adapter works permanently, even with the Wi-Fi switched off. I can't figure out how to fix this on the desktop. The desktop doesn't have Wi-Fi, so I can't use the same solution as with the laptop. If you think the adapter is hopeless I'm open to buying a different one online, or even replacing the desktop. You can find the results of the command ' ipconfig /all' here: Edited by npw, 10 May 2015 - 10:48 AM.

Did you set it to a private network? Or tell it to obtain an IP address when it connects? Okay, just read what you said about the laptop. I think this adapter is a WiFi adapter with a cord connected where the antenna would be, lol.

You may want to try configuring like a standard WiFi device? And also, did you try looking at it like a storage drive?

The drivers, at least I can see, are on the stick like a USB pen drive. Right now it's set as a public network. I'm not sure how to change that, but does it matter? This is the IP setting that I tried changing: It didn't work, so I changed it back.