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Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black
Vendor
StarTech

StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black

4.0
Regular price
€57,00
Sale price
€57,00
Regular price
€94,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€37,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Add high-speed Wireless-N connectivity to a desktop or laptop system through USB 2.0
  • USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter
  • 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter
  • USB Wireless Adapter
  • N300 Wireless NIC
  • Leave the adapter plugged into your laptop without worry, with an ultra-compact adapter
  • Ensure fast, reliable network connectivity, with full Wireless-N compatibility
  • Connect to older wireless networks easily, with 802.11b/g backward compatibility
  • Extremely compact and lightweight design
  • 2 Transmitter/2 Receiver (2x2:2) antenna configuration
  • Compliant with IEEE 802.11n standards, with data rates up to 300Mbps
  • Backward compatible with 802.11b/g (11/54Mbps respectively)
  • Supports WEP (64-128-bit), WPA and WPA2 wireless security

Shipping and Returns

  • We offer tracked shipping on all orders. Tracking information will be shared as soon as the order is dispatched.
  • Please check the delivery estimate before adding a product to the cart. This is displayed for every product on the website.
  • Available shipping methods and charges will be displayed at the time of checkout, depending on your exact location.
  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

Working on Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTSAfter almost giving up and returning this, I found paspro/rtl8812au on github (just search for it) with working drivers for kernel 4.13! Supposedly this driver also works up to kernel 4.15. The instructions are super-easy.Seems to be full speed on 5GHz 802.11n. I'm just going across my living room, so I can't speak much to range.Note that when installing, you may have to remove the version number from the folder because the install script is looking for rtl8812au. So extract the ZIP file, then change rtl8812au-5.1.5 to rtl8812au before running dkms install script.lsusb lists this device as "0bda:a811 Realtek Semiconductor Corp."That's Realtek's "demo board" ID instead of a custom manufactured one, which means any driver for this chipset should recognize the generic ID and work.5Love it, I bought it for my mom's Macbook ...Love it, I bought it for my mom's Macbook Pro (a bit of an older one- but runs just fine).It had a wireless card issue, where the wireless was cutting out quite a bit, so insteadof possibly risking anything, with opening the case up for card replacement.... I boughtthis as a "try"- well it works great!!Computer stats- MacBook Pro, Version 10.9.5Hope this info helps- with anyone looking for possible Mac compatibility?!!:)5Good performance for the priceNeeded a NIC upgrade for my older Dell Inspiron 15R (Dell Wireless 1705 802.11 b/g/n 2.4 gHz). My Internet service is Comcast 150 mbps: laptop speed was down to 15 mbps, or less. My desktop (TP-Link 802.11 a/c running 180mbps on 5 gHz).Installed StarTech USB 2.0 AC600 Dual Band Mini NIC (802.11 b/g/ac) in my Dell Inspiron laptop and speed increased from 15 mbps (2.4 ghz band) to 180 mbps (5 ghz band)...same as desktop TP-Link dual antennae PCI-e NIC.Only negative for the StarTech USB NIC is the size. The StarTech USB NIC protrudes 2 cm when inserted in the USB port compared to the 1 cm for most USB transceivers for a mouse.I would not recommend leaving the StarTech USB NIC installed while transporting a laptop in a backpack.4Inexpensive, Capable Desktop Wireless Network AdapterThis wireless network adapter provides perfectly functional connection from a homebrew desktop computer to my IEEE 802.11-n wireless network, and prevents me from having to string Ethernet cables from my router to the computer, a major "plus".Windows 7 required no StarTech software drivers; drivers available from Microsoft were sufficient. Signal strength from my relatively old D-Link DIR-655 router, located three walls and about 30 feet from the desktop machine (and on the same residential floor), shows about 4-1/2 "bars" on the Windows 7 built-in wireless network signal strength indicator. The same Microsoft signal monitor shows connection "speed" of about 130 MB/s - at least as good as that from a moderately high-end Dell laptop when used in the same location. With standard PCI card configuration and adequate Microsoft software drivers, installation was a non-event - plug in and secure the network adapter card, turn on the desktop, wait for Windows 7 to install drivers, and go.Like all desktop wireless network adapters without coaxial cable connected to antennas located away from the computer, this network adapter has less received signal strength than laptops with optimally located built-in antennas in the top lid. The antennas furnished with the StarTech adapter are located too close to, are shielded by, and suffer multipath signal degradation from, the desktop case. A separate antenna, located above the desktop case and oriented for maximum router signal, would be superior, despite losses in coax connecting that antenna to the adapter card itself.Despite these technical limitations, inherent in all desktop wireless network cards having card-mounted antennas, the StarTech wireless network card provides good performance at low cost, and minimal installation effort.5Installed with ease, performs like no other.It works great, gets the most out of your network speed available. I strongly recommend this product if you're planning on bringing your desktop to anywhere with WiFi available or find yourself in a situation where a wired connection is not an option.*note*If you're afraid it is not working because the green light does not turn on immediately after installing it do not worry! AFTER you install the driver it'll turn on.5Worked in Windows 10 right out of the box!Worked in Windows 10 right out of the box! I did not need to download any drivers from Startech or use the supplied mini-cd that had the drivers on it. It was totally plug and play for me. I literally took it out of the box and plugged it in and Windows 10 installed its driver and I was up and running in seconds. I have Verizon Fios 50/50 and I did the speedtest.net test and got 56/68 with this little adapter. Some background. I have a Samsung laptop that had the built-in internal Wi-Fi adapter go bad. I went into the bios and disabled the onboard Wi-Fi adapter and plugged the StarTech USB adapter in its place. The speed I am now getting is nearly double what the onboard adapter was capable of providing. I believe my onboard adapter was only a G standard compared to this new N version in the StarTech. Not sure if this has a lot to do with it or not, but I am getting maximum bandwidth from this little dongle. My laptop has only USB 2.0 which is plenty fast enough for this device. If you have a newer machine with USB 3.0, you might want to consider the AC version of this device unless your onboard Wi-Fi is already at that speed. I am totally impressed with the ease of installation and speed of this little adapter. If you upgraded to Windows 10 it should work out of the box, but I can't verify this since I did a clean install of Windows 10 on a new Samsung EVO SSD that I also put in the same laptop a week ago. Your results may very, but at a minimum, if it doesn't work out of the box like mine did, just install the drivers from StarTech.com under the "support" tab for this device and you will be fine.5Wow... this brought my old Macbook Pro back from the deadTL;DR If you're in doubt, don't be. The product and the team are impressive. Give it a shot.After spotty service for a week, the Airport wifi/bluetooth card on my mid-2010 Macbook Pro finally died, as did the Ethernet port, so I had no Internet connectivity. Spent $20 on a new Airport card, but still got "No hardware installed."Decided to give this a shot and in less than 5 minutes, it had me back online (green icon on the left). I'm writing this from the same Macbook that was essentially a 9yo doorstop. Speed tests are comparable to what they were with my Apple card, too.UPDATE: The next day, my work connection was dismal compared to home, at 1Mbps vs. 51Mbps. But a chat support guy, Chris, spent about an hour testing a few things and fixed the problem. Now I'm getting 26Mbps on a shared network. Really impressed.5Time for open chipset declaration!One reviewer listed the chipset in this device as RTL 8192, which for a linux user is right on.I found after the cmd. (as root) " lspci -nnv | less " to my surprise the details were of a Ralink 5392 chipset.While an easy fix is available in the .deb RT 5390 file, and I happen to like Ralink chipsets, theproducers of these devices could easily list the chipset in the product description.The chipset drives ALL aspects of the device, and when vending a pci-e (x1) product that standard of revelationin product descriptions needs to be the norm, not the exception.3RTL8192EU device in Linux, instructions here to get working!Smallest 300mbps wifi adapter I could fine & works as expected. Running Linux, it was hard to get working, though. The drivers on the StarTech.com site are very out of date for Linux. The device is a RTL8192EU & I had to find the deb package here: https://forum.ubuntu-nl.org/index.php?topic=86081.msg930664#msg930664 -- It didn't work with the latest gcc, though, because a warning gets marked as an error. I had to repackage the deb by adding -Wno-error=time-date to the Makefile inside. Anyway, I did all this already I uploaded the new driver here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bza9ecEdICHGSjZMUWtmUHM2em8/view?usp=sharing it will work with DKMS too, so no need to recompile every kernel update.5Works fine on a Mac, but with a few qualifications.Looks like it works well on my Mac, a mid-2011 iMac with Sierra 10.12.5. Software downloaded and installed easily. Plugged in the device and it and the Apple Airport wifi were recognized immediately. Wifi connected with no problem. I use Little Snitch firewall/monitor and the seem to coexist just fine.My Mac's internal wifi card has been suspect for several years. After a few hours or minutes, it would claim to be connected at full strength but there was no network access. Had to turn wifi off/on to recover. No software or firmware fixes that I could find would solve the problem, and there were no problems with other devices. So far, this device has stayed connected. It supports the newer "ac" standard (Mac was b/g/n) could potentially be faster, but I'm on satellite which is the limiting factor. I immediately noticed that web pages start to load faster, and unexpected surprise. Measured download speed hasn't changed. Perhaps my internal wifi card was ailing worse than I realized.Some caveats:- Signal reception is good, but less than the original. This is as expected given the tiny size of the device. If you need range, consider one that comes with an external antenna. (This one does not, contrary to one posting that I saw for it).- The negotiated data rate is about half what an adjacent iPad shows and slightly less than an iPhone at the same location. I expect that this is partially a function of the antenna size and resulting signal quality.- This uses its own wifi control thingy, not the MacOSX control. It is a bit simplistic, so there could be a feature that you might miss.- As with all third party devices and software, there is always a potential for issues with on-going support and update timeliness.5
StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black

StarTech.com USB 2.0 300 Mbps Mini Wireless-N Network Adapter - 802.11n 2T2R WiFi Adapter - USB Wireless Adapter - N300 Wireless NIC (USB300WN2X2C),Black

4.0
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€57,00
Sale price
€57,00
Regular price
€94,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€37,00)