Hello, a friend wants to give me a G435 headset, but he tells me that he lost the dongle. I heard that they also work with Bluetooth. My question is, will I have any problems without the dongle and will I be able to use them normally with Bluetooth?
I am currently working on a project where we will have limited time working with the Ion console we have available so I would like to program it ahead of time on the computer and then transfer it to the console. The problem that I have is that I'm not sure if our theater department has the dongle for use together. Is there any way to use the computer program without the dongle? I know that using it is fine as I've done some simple stuff to get used to working with it, but I need to know if it's possible to get the results off my computer and onto the board.
First, do you have a license dongle connected to the machine? The steps above are all under the assumption that someone does have a dongle. These steps are to make sure the driver for the license dongle is installed.
From what we understand from the USB dongle schematics, the USB is a combination of a USB to Serial module with an RFduino integrated to connect to the cyton's RF module. Is there a way to use the equipment we have to use the Cyton board without the USB dongle?
Thanks, OpenBCI Team.
Hi, this board was purchased from OpenBCI for research from previous years. We think the dongle was lost by the previous users so that's why they were trying to use the modules in the pictures. Is there a way to connect the board without it while the dongle is shipped?
I here have a bunch of controllers that are xbox and ps2. they are all wireless controllers and they have no dongles. it would not be worth to buy any dongles for them as the dongles are worth more than a new usb or even a wireless controller. there the question is this. is there any way to convert these wireless controllers to a wired connection to use on the computer?
If we're speaking Original Xbox and PS2 chances are those are third party controllers, therefore finding a dongle to plug is probably impossible. If it's Xbox 360 or newer you can get dongles for it. With PS3 you can connect it through a USB cable to your PC, not sure about wireless functionality though.
As the dongle is acting the middle piece... you would need to open controller and see if the PCB has places for wire connection. Or something like that. Those controllers both used proprietary ends when wired. So you had to have adapter to even connect them to PC.
UnknownModder - If your replacement headset was new, it would've come with a dongle so no pairing is needed. If you wanted to use the old dongle for some reason, you can pair them: -us/articles/360025279392-Pair-the-VOID-PRO-RGB-Headset-and-Wireless-Receiver-Dongle
Also, a managed switch should never stay on DHCP-assigned IP address. The management IP should always be manually assigned. If the user knows enough to be able to manage a switch, the user should be able to assign a static IP to the switch. I can see that the DHCP client feature is necessary for a managed switch without a console port so that the initial IP address could be assigned by DHCP for accessing the switch initially, but as soon as the switch is accessed, the user should change the IP to a static one and turn the DHCP feature off.
OK - I'm going to chime in as well. I stress-tested a UE300 for weeks at full bandwidth without a single dropped packet. In fact, it's been SO stable in real-world production use with a heavy-streaming family of five and two adults working from home that it's outperformed my Ubiquiti EdgeRouter by leaps and bounds.
I'm using a Pi 4 with GigE fiber, the POE hat and a Vantec USB 3.0 to dual ethernet adapter (was $27 when I bought it from that ginormous world-conquering vendor named after a Brazilian river, seems to be slightly more expensive now). It uses the Realtek r8153 module straight out of the box. Yeah, it's more expensive than two UE300s but it leaves a USB3 port free for other purposes; and given that a single USB3 port has a theoretical 5gbps available half duplex, both interfaces get full gigE capability without a problem.
@gee_one, thanks for sharing, that Wired Display seems to be the key to my problem.
I got GTX 960 from my friend, Looking Glass worked fine without HDMI cable/dongle connected, it also worked with my GTX 970. The first time I used looking glass to access my VM with those GPUs, the Windows 10 VM seems to create a Wired Display by itself. I can login and setup my preferred resolution and it will keep all the settings after reboot. It runs 4KHD 60fps on ufotest website without any issue.
My friend tried to pass through my GTX 1070, but he could not able to get looking glass worked without HDMI connected. He said that he saw the login screen, but his mouse and keyboard were not working, and VM seems to crash itself. He could not create a Virtual Display in Windows 10 manually. It seems that Microsoft remove that function after Windows 8.1.
I do not have another GTX 1070 or any GPU with newer architecture, so I have no idea if this is only My GTX 1070, or this happened to all NVIDIA GPUS with the same and newer architecture .
For now, I will just swap my GTX 970 and GTX1070 to get rid of my HDMI dongle.
i remember a thread on reddit where someone posted a tool and write up on how to use virtual monitor in windows without the need of dummy dongles. Especially if you want high res high refresh rate output.
Can anyone help. I have limited usb ports on my computer (HP Laptop) and I want to connect the wireless mouse to it without the dongle. However I cannot get the mouse to be recognised by the computer?
A wireless mouse connects with the matching wireless receiver ( the matching dongle). Without the dongle, it will not have a connection, unless it uses Bluetooth and your laptop uses Bluetooth. Without the complete model number of the mouse and the laptop, unable to help further.
From the product information page, it says nothing about Bluetooth, so I have to assume it uses the normal 2.4GHz signal similar to WiFi but it needs the USB receiver designed for the mouse. The work around would be to replace the dongle or get a different mouse that has a dongle.
Sorry for jumping in. As you said, it is a Link-5 dongle therefore you can buy a new Link-5 receiver and RE-PROGRAM it. Otherwise buying a new set because each mouse must have a code to talk with its receiver (dongle). Just thinking a small room with 20 people who use SAME coded mice/receivers, must be very interesting.
USB keys are a great way to protect software products from unauthorized use. Unfortunately, it can be very inconvenient to have the physical dongle present, especially when working in a remote location. There are many instances where having the ability to run your programs without the USB key can boost productivity and make your life easier. You keep wondering how to run busy software without dongle. We are going to show you how to accomplish this feat simply and reliably. Donglify provides three ways to use software without a dongle.
Donglify is a software tool that will help you to run software without dongle, eliminating the need to connect it to the computer. Donglify allows remote PCs to use the software without dongle. The solution is compatible with current and older versions of the Windows operating system and also with MacOS.
The ability to invite other users to remotely run a software without dongle allows you to control who uses the device while maintaining the privacy of your account credentials. Use the following procedure to send other users invitations to access the dongle.
Recently I have switched to the latest Ubuntu version 22.0 from Windows 11.
It is very easy to install but there is some problem in it which I am facing on this version.
Everything works properly but the Bluetooth is not working properly it shows that I have to use a USB dongle to access Bluetooth even my device has already in bluetooth inbuilt which I am using since I was on Windows.
Even the Bluetooth button isn't working and still say me that I should use a USB dongles to use Bluetooth.
And I am very unhappy with this issue and I want fix it now without using any external USB dongle or something else.
I tried some internet options like running command installing Bluetooth drivers and deleting them reinstalling again a lots of internet things I use but it didn't work.
A Terminal command shows Bluetooth working and its still running but it's actually it is not working in settings and there is and unable to connect my bluetooth device with my PC which is on Ubuntu 22.0
The 10th gen iPad would come with a USB-C port and a gen 1 Apple Pencil. In order to charge, yes, there should be an included dongle. There is no way to charge the Pencil without a female Lightning port to plug the Apple Pencil into, which the dongle provides.
Did a ride in Tuesday, and it worked ok. Now both TR and Zwift can;t find the dongle. I am running Windows11, and looking in the settings (under bleutooth and other devices) both my ANT+ dongles have a green dot (which means that W11 detects them, I assume). But neither TR nor Zwift can find the dongles.
With the last (or might have been 2nd last) pc update (its also happened in the past), TR never recognised my ant+ dongle despite the laptop (Windows 11) having done so. It was just a case of restarting the TR app for me.
Was having the same issue - computer was recognizing the ant+ dongle was in the computer but TR/Zwift was not. Go into device manger and locate the ANT+ device (mine had a small yellow exclamation point next to it and in the properties said there was no driver installed, even after installing the TR driver). It gives you the option to look for a driver, which you can download and unzip from here. Tell the device manger to install the driver from the downloaded folder and then it should be good to go.
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