usb to

PL2303 USB to Serial Driver 0.3.1
Supports different manufacturers of PL2303 based USB to serial dongles like ATEN, IOData, Elcom, Itegno, Ma620, Ratoc, Tripp, and more. more>>
Supports different manufacturers of PL2303 based USB to serial dongles like ATEN, IOData, Elcom, Itegno, Ma620, Ratoc, Tripp, Radioshack, Dcu10, SiteCom, Alcatel, Samsung, Siemens, Syntech, Nokia, MS3303H
BF-7011 USB to IrDA Adapter Driver 1.2
Easily install the OS X drivers for your BF-7011 USB to IrDA Adapter more>> Easily install the OS X drivers for your BF-7011 USB to IrDA Adapter
BF-7011 USB to IrDA bridge adapter is for enabling IrDA wireless data communication through a standard USB port. Powered from USB bus, this product does not require any external power adapter.
It supports SIR (2.4Kbps to 115.2Kbps), MIR (576Kbps to 1152Kbps), and FIR (4Mbps) modes. The effective data transmission distance is from 0 to 1M. The reception or viewing angle in a typical environment is 30 Po (+ / P- 15PoP).
Use the product; you could transfer data with wireless connection for PC, PDA, digital camera, scanner and printer.
BF-7011 USB to IrDA Adapter Driver will allow you to easily install the OS X drivers for your BF-7011 USB to IrDA Adapter.
Main features:
- Easily enable IrDA function on the desktop PC through USB port
- USB Plug and Play convenience
- Fully compatible with IrDA 1.1 and USB 1.1 specification
- Compatible with SIR (2.4Kbps to 115.2Kbps) and FIR (4Mbps)
- No power adapter required
- Low power consumption
System requirements:
- Power G3, G4, or I-Mac
- Available USB port
- CD-ROM drive
USB Monitor 1.1.1
USB Monitor - Notifies when usb devices are added/removed more>>
USB Monitor eliminates the guess work. It pops up a little window and provides the name of the device thats just been plugged in (or unplugged).
The window follows the visual style of the transparent windows for volume and eject.
Enhancements:
- Fixed memory leak.

USBCat 3.0
Your Mac meows when a USB peripheral is connected/disconnected as well as a removal disk is mounted/unmounted. more>>
Your Mac meows when a USB peripheral is connected/disconnected as well as a removal disk is mounted/unmounted. Just enjoy!
FGIO USB 1.0
The FGIO_USB board is a general purpose Digital Input and Digital Output 16+16 channel managed by a Microchip microcontroller more>>
The board uses different bus technogies for handling electronic communication with on board device.
FGIO_USB use I2C for communicate with on board 256Kb EEPROM, SPI for communicate with the MCP23S17 chip (is a Microchip 16 I/O Expander) and for communicate with 128 x 128 Graphic LCD Color Display (Nokia 6100).
USB-to-Ethernet 1.0
USB-to-Ethernet offers you USB to Ethernet Adaptor Drivers more>>
USB-to-Ethernet offers you USB to Ethernet Adaptor Drivers.
There are two basic catagories of USB-To-Ethernet adaptors:
- USB 1.1 devices that use a Pegasus driver.
- USB 2.0 devices that use a AX8817x driver (or its successor, the AX88772).
Each disk image includes an installer for Panther or Tiger, and a "src" folder containing the corresponding xCode projects.
Installation
Download and mount the appropriate driver disk image listed above, run the corresponding installer for Panther or Tiger, and then restart your system as suggested. The Installer will ask you to authenticate so it can place the corresponding driver in "/System/Library/Extensions/" with the correct file permisions to load as a kernel extension.
Next, plug-in your Ethernet adaptor with a live Ethernet cable attached. When you open the Network Preferences panel, it should inform you that a new port has appeared and ask if you want to enable it. Enable the new port and apply your network settings. Thats it.
Each driver is pre-configured to recognize a handfull of common devices. If your device does not appear to be recognized by the driver, you might have to add it to the Info.plist file, which is located inside the USBPegasusEthernet.kext or USBAx8817x.kext directory. You can use the System Profiler or USBProber tool to find the corresponding Product ID and Vendor ID.
To uninstall the driver, make sure any USB adaptors are disconnected, and then drag the corresponding driver in /System/Library/Extensions/ USBPegaususEthernet.kext or USBAx8817x.kext to the trash. You may need to authenticate that you have administrator privileges.
USB 1.1 Performance
The Pegasus chipset provides a USB 1.1 compatible implementation which could be a concern for some users. USB 1.1 runs at 1.5 Mbps (low speed) or 12 Mbps (full speed). For best performance, its important to isolate any low speed devices on a separate bus. Mice and keyboards often run at low speed.
Using the Link Rate tool in IPNetMonitorX, I measured the link rate to another device on my LAN as 6 Mbps. The built-in Ethernet on my 12" PBG4 reported 44 Mpbs. When I measured the link rate to the next hop router through my cable modem, it reported 1 mbps. It didnt make any difference whether I used Ethernet built-in or the USB-To-Ethernet adaptor. Finally, I downloaded a 2.2 MB file to compare the throughput using the Monitor tool.
Both downloads took 5 seconds, but Ethernet built-in reached a peak rate of 589 KBps versus 579 kBps. Repeating the experiment several times produced similar results. Ethernet built-in might be 1-2% faster, but performance was clearly limited by the speed of my cable modem (Your Mileage May Vary).
USB 2.0 Performance
The AX8817x chip set provides a USB 2.0 compatible implementation which runs at up to 480 Mbps (high speed), so it should be possible to keep up with 100 Mbps fast ethernet as long as there are no other slower devices on the same bus. To test this I copied a 64.8 MB music file to my PBG4 laptop connected through a LinkSys USB200M Ethernet Adaptor (en3) and compared this to the same file transfer using Built-in Ethernet (en0).
Both transfers reached 10 MBps (80-90 Mbps) and took about 10 seconds. I repeated the test in the other direction.
While the USB-To-Ethernet adaptor was slightly slower, at 80 Mbps there was little noticeable difference. Files moved quickly from one system to another via 100 Mbps fast Ethernet. Copying the same file using AirPort wireless took 50-90 seconds.
Stability
While other USB-To-Ethernet drivers are reported to be buggy, I havent encountered any stability problems to date. The adaptor turns off when the computer goes to sleep and comes back on when the computer awakes. It does not support "Wake On LAN" at this time.
Wrap Up
This USB-To-Ethernet Adaptor combination could be an attractive solution for a Mac Mini, or old iBook used as an Internet gateway or server. Im particularly fond of using old laptops as servers since they are compact, quiet, use little energy, and include their own battery backup.
Sleep USB 1.0
Sleep USB - Quit out of any applications running from non-startup drives more>>
This script will attempt to quit out of any applications running from non-startup drives, eject these drives, and then eject the USB card before putting the system to sleep.
USBp 20030416
USBp -USB-based serial device programming system more>>
Enhancements:
- This version corrects several errors, including a Makefile error that made the whole system not work. FPGA support is coming in the near future (FLEX10K).
USB Floppy Enabler 2.1
USB Floppy Enabler - A Floppy Emulator for Power Macintosh G3 and G4 Computers more>>
The USB Floppy Enabler currently supports Imation1s SuperDisk and Newer Technology1s uDrive, two of the leading external USB floppy systems.
PACE is working with several other major USB floppy drive manufacturers to ensure universal compatibility.
This driver will not only allow software products and content protected by InterLok* to be authorized with PACE1s KeyDiskettes, but it will also enable other developers1 software products to access the new USB drives, said PACE president and CEO, Allen Cronce. Our USB Floppy Enabler should be of interest to anyone with software that makes calls to the floppy drive. PACEs InterLok technology has been successfully protecting our Japanese font products for nearly ten years, said Jim DeLaHunt, Adobe Type Library Engineering Manager.
The floppyless PowerMac G3 machines presented us with a unique situation that called for an innovative solution. PACEs innovation has averted a major re-engineering expense and will help us provide uninterrupted distribution of our Japanese font products.
Apple USB DDK 1.5.5f1
Apple USB DDK is a development software package that gives you some of the tools that you need to write your own USB drivers. Requirements: MacOS 8.0 or later more>> Apple USB DDK is a development software package that gives you some of the tools that you need to write your own USB drivers.
MacOS 8.0 or later.
Version 1.5.5f1 provides support for PCI USB cards which do not support Power Management correctly
SkyLine USB Adaptor Driver 1.1
SkyLine USB Adaptor Driver contains the drivers necessary to connect a Proxim SkyLine USB Adaptor to your Mac more>> SkyLine USB Adaptor Driver contains the drivers necessary to connect a Proxim SkyLine USB Adaptor to your Mac.
Proxim SkyLine USB Adaptor.
USB-TCP Bridge 1.2
USB-TCP Bridge - Bridge Palm USB to TCP/IP sockets more>>
The software can also be redistributed with predefined settings. As an example, "AvantGo USB Sync" is a repackaging of USB-TCP Bridge with built-in AvantGo synchronization for Mac OS X.
Enhancements:
- New UI with predefined selections in the pop-up menu, and a separate field for custom TCP port editing
- The bridge now supports a Connection Type selection which determines which USB pipes will be used for reading/writing
- The bridge can now execute a unix command line upon connection.
- Preferences are now remembered accross sessions
- New forced settings mechanism for distributing a locked binary with presets (see documentation)
- Quit the application when the window closes
- French translation by Michel Poulain.
Automatic USB Support 1.0
Automatic USB Support - Enable the USB Support extension more>>
USB Mass Storage Support X 1.4
[ via XLR8YourMac ] USB Mass Storage Support is a set of USB Mass Storage Class drivers to support USB Mass Storage Class devices more>> [ via XLR8YourMac ] USB Mass Storage Support is a set of USB Mass Storage Class drivers to support USB Mass Storage Class devices. USB includes the notion of Class drivers, a set of software components generally delivered by Operating System vendors that are able to communicate with not just one, but many different USB devices of a particular kind. This enables any number of compliant devices to be plugged in and start working immediately without the need to install additional software. Several Class Drivers are already included in Mac OS for its computers with USB, including a hub class driver and a composite class driver. The Mass Storage Support software represents one of these class drivers and is intended to support devices that meet the USB Mass Storage Class specification.
Mac OS X 10.2 or later.
USB Mass Storage Support 1.3.5
USB Mass Storage Support 1.3.5 is a set of USB Mass Storage Class drivers written by Apple Computer to support USB Mass Storage Class devices more>> USB Mass Storage Support 1.3.5 is a set of USB Mass Storage Class drivers written by Apple Computer to support USB Mass Storage Class devices. USB includes the notion of Class drivers, a set of software components generally delivered by Operating System vendors that are able to communicate with not just one, but many different USB devices of a particular kind. This enables any number of compliant devices to be plugged in and start working immediately without the need to install additional software. Several Class Drivers are already included in Mac OS for its computers with USB, including a hub class driver and a composite class driver. Over time, Apple expects to offer new and updated Class drivers for USB. The Mass Storage Support software represents one of these class drivers and is intended to support devices that meet the USB Mass Storage Class specification.
Mac OS 8.6. You do not need to install this software if you have installed Mac OS 9.