What is the function of a Thunderbolt gigabit ethernet + USB 3.0 adapter if Thunderbolt 1/2 does not provide USB functionality?

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What is the function of this device: A Kanex “Thunderbolt Gigabit Ethernet + USB 3.0 Adapter?”



According to the accepted answers of this and this question, Thunderbolt 1/2 does not provide any USB functionality. Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?



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    What is the function of this device: A Kanex “Thunderbolt Gigabit Ethernet + USB 3.0 Adapter?”



    According to the accepted answers of this and this question, Thunderbolt 1/2 does not provide any USB functionality. Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?



    enter image description here










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      What is the function of this device: A Kanex “Thunderbolt Gigabit Ethernet + USB 3.0 Adapter?”



      According to the accepted answers of this and this question, Thunderbolt 1/2 does not provide any USB functionality. Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?



      enter image description here










      share|improve this question















      What is the function of this device: A Kanex “Thunderbolt Gigabit Ethernet + USB 3.0 Adapter?”



      According to the accepted answers of this and this question, Thunderbolt 1/2 does not provide any USB functionality. Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?



      enter image description here







      usb thunderbolt






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      edited Dec 2 at 3:31









      JakeGould

      30.9k1093137




      30.9k1093137










      asked Dec 2 at 2:33









      CJLM

      419




      419




















          1 Answer
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          accepted











          What is the function of this device, a Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB 3.0 USB (and Ethernet) Adapter?




          It is a USB Gigabit Ethernet adapter since it does not take any additional product design effort, the manufacturer added a USB 3.0 port. The ethernet adapter is actually a USB device, and so you basically have a fancy Thunderbolt to USB adapter, which has an ethernet adapter as an additional feature.




          Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?




          The product is real. The answer you received from your other question, only was in reference to plugging in USB devices directly into a Thunderbolt port, the USB device is being plugged into a USB port (connected to the adapter's PCB). Your second link question provides examples of Thunderbolt to USB adapters.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 1




            My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 2:43










          • In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
            – JakeGould
            Dec 2 at 3:00










          • @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 3:13










          • Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 6:51







          • 1




            @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
            – Bakuriu
            Dec 2 at 9:17










          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          active

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          up vote
          3
          down vote



          accepted











          What is the function of this device, a Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB 3.0 USB (and Ethernet) Adapter?




          It is a USB Gigabit Ethernet adapter since it does not take any additional product design effort, the manufacturer added a USB 3.0 port. The ethernet adapter is actually a USB device, and so you basically have a fancy Thunderbolt to USB adapter, which has an ethernet adapter as an additional feature.




          Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?




          The product is real. The answer you received from your other question, only was in reference to plugging in USB devices directly into a Thunderbolt port, the USB device is being plugged into a USB port (connected to the adapter's PCB). Your second link question provides examples of Thunderbolt to USB adapters.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 1




            My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 2:43










          • In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
            – JakeGould
            Dec 2 at 3:00










          • @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 3:13










          • Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 6:51







          • 1




            @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
            – Bakuriu
            Dec 2 at 9:17














          up vote
          3
          down vote



          accepted











          What is the function of this device, a Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB 3.0 USB (and Ethernet) Adapter?




          It is a USB Gigabit Ethernet adapter since it does not take any additional product design effort, the manufacturer added a USB 3.0 port. The ethernet adapter is actually a USB device, and so you basically have a fancy Thunderbolt to USB adapter, which has an ethernet adapter as an additional feature.




          Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?




          The product is real. The answer you received from your other question, only was in reference to plugging in USB devices directly into a Thunderbolt port, the USB device is being plugged into a USB port (connected to the adapter's PCB). Your second link question provides examples of Thunderbolt to USB adapters.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 1




            My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 2:43










          • In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
            – JakeGould
            Dec 2 at 3:00










          • @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 3:13










          • Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 6:51







          • 1




            @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
            – Bakuriu
            Dec 2 at 9:17












          up vote
          3
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          3
          down vote



          accepted







          What is the function of this device, a Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB 3.0 USB (and Ethernet) Adapter?




          It is a USB Gigabit Ethernet adapter since it does not take any additional product design effort, the manufacturer added a USB 3.0 port. The ethernet adapter is actually a USB device, and so you basically have a fancy Thunderbolt to USB adapter, which has an ethernet adapter as an additional feature.




          Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?




          The product is real. The answer you received from your other question, only was in reference to plugging in USB devices directly into a Thunderbolt port, the USB device is being plugged into a USB port (connected to the adapter's PCB). Your second link question provides examples of Thunderbolt to USB adapters.






          share|improve this answer













          What is the function of this device, a Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB 3.0 USB (and Ethernet) Adapter?




          It is a USB Gigabit Ethernet adapter since it does not take any additional product design effort, the manufacturer added a USB 3.0 port. The ethernet adapter is actually a USB device, and so you basically have a fancy Thunderbolt to USB adapter, which has an ethernet adapter as an additional feature.




          Is this product a scam or do I miss something here?




          The product is real. The answer you received from your other question, only was in reference to plugging in USB devices directly into a Thunderbolt port, the USB device is being plugged into a USB port (connected to the adapter's PCB). Your second link question provides examples of Thunderbolt to USB adapters.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 2 at 2:42









          Ramhound

          19.5k156084




          19.5k156084







          • 1




            My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 2:43










          • In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
            – JakeGould
            Dec 2 at 3:00










          • @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 3:13










          • Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 6:51







          • 1




            @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
            – Bakuriu
            Dec 2 at 9:17












          • 1




            My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 2:43










          • In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
            – JakeGould
            Dec 2 at 3:00










          • @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 3:13










          • Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
            – Ramhound
            Dec 2 at 6:51







          • 1




            @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
            – Bakuriu
            Dec 2 at 9:17







          1




          1




          My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 2:43




          My conclusion about the ethernet device is based on experience, I have no way to confirm that is the case, since I don't have the hardware in question.
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 2:43












          In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
          – JakeGould
          Dec 2 at 3:00




          In general even internal peripherals that come on devices like MacBooks nowadays are all connected via an internal USB hub; USB from a technical standpoint but no explicit hub or connector from the user perspective. So your assumption is legit.
          – JakeGould
          Dec 2 at 3:00












          @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 3:13




          @JakeGould - I knew at that device was a Thunderbolt to a USB device, what I didn't know for sure is if the ethernet adapter was a USB device or a Thunderbolt device, in theory, the performance could be different
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 3:13












          Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 6:51





          Thunderbolt 1/2 to USB adapters exists. As I explained, the answer you linked to, only indicated that you cannot plug a USB cables directly into a Thunderbolt 1/2 ports. I can only answer questions asked in the body of this question.
          – Ramhound
          Dec 2 at 6:51





          1




          1




          @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
          – Bakuriu
          Dec 2 at 9:17




          @CJLM This hardware was designed precisely because thunderbolt has no "usb functionality". The whole point of an adapter is to connect two things that, by themselves, are incompatible!
          – Bakuriu
          Dec 2 at 9:17

















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