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Usb Serial Adapter Virtualbox For Mac

Usb Serial Adapter Virtualbox For Mac Rating: 7,8/10 8138 votes

Description USB to Serial adapter providing one RS232 serial port. Data transfer rates up to 921,600 baud rates and the 128 byte deep transmit and 256 byte receive FIFOS, coupled with 1Mbit line drivers deliver uncompromising performance on your laptop/PC. Drivers for Windows 32 bit and 64 bit Drivers for Windows 32 bit and 64 bit Operating Systems including Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Server 2008, Vista, Server 2003 and Windows XP with additional drivers for Raspberry Pi, Mac OS X and Linux. Lifetime warranty and support. Customer Feedback. THANK YOU SO MUCH for your brilliant product (US-101)!!. We tried many other brands and a few other USB to serial adapters.

Usb to serial adapter drivers free download - Keyspan USB Twin Serial Adapter, USB Audio ASIO driver, IOXperts USB WebCam Driver, and many more programs. May 22, 2013 - I can connect/disconnect/reconnect the USB Serial Port everywhere and the guest system recognizes it. No serial ports defined on the VM.

None of them worked! I’ve been buying and returning like crazy. I finally called IBM/Lenovo out of desperation and somewhere in their internal knowledgebase was a mention of your product working. So I bought one from Buy.com as a test.

It arrived today. =) You are likely the only manufacturer on the planet that makes a working serial to USB adapter for IBM/Lenovo. I would sugges Creative NetVentures, Inc. After searching a lot on the internet for a good USB to Serial (RS232), I elected the Brainboxes US-101 for the following reasons:. it really seemed to be a very good device and completely suited for my needs (size, features, technical data) - very good ratings all over the internet. ready and tested for Windows 7 (64 bits).

developed and made in Europe from an european company!. lifetime guarantee. lifetime support. Brainboxes seems to be a company really focused on having good and reliable products and respect its customers Luis Goncalves.

We have been massively impressed by the Brainboxes USB to RS232 converter. It is the best adapter we have found as it fully supports all 9 pins and has compatible drivers for windows 2000 through to Windows 7 64 bit meaning one solution can be used with all of our machines. We have been able to communicate with legacy PLCs such as the Honeywell IPC range through to modern PLCs such as the Allen Bradley Control Logix range. Unlike many other converters that can be hit-and-miss we are yet to find a device your converter will not work with. We have recommended your product to all of the automa Coca Cola Enterprises.

Typical Product Applications Communicating with Industrial Equipment. For programming Siemens S5 PLC's. US-101 connects to Driver/Controller to enable configuration of Parker Compax Servo Drive/Controller. USB-Serial with industrial software requiring direct serial connection.

Communicate with serial devices PLC's, low frequency radio, HMI's control instrumentation. Some interface modules we use, need a serial port. A regular USB / RS-232 adapter just doesn't cut it.

To connect my laptop PC to industrial diagnostic equipment. Industrial analysis and control of serial Comms. PC to Machine DNC via serial link. New PC has no serial ports so USB 2 COM3 is fine. Connecting From a Windows XP PC to a Servo controller communicating at high speed. Engine and Vehicle Diagnostics. Using as a direct USB to serial port connection for engine diagnostic tooling.

For taking the capture file of Cummins engine data. PC connecting to in Insight Car Diagnostic Tool.

To communicate with Cummins PowerGen products which require the use of an RS232 port Configuring Networking devices. Network equipment such as managed switches. Connecting laptop to Cisco routers and switches, most of these routers and switches require a RS232 port for connecting to the console. Cisco Switch Configurations. Connecting my Mac to serial devices. HP ProCurve Switches using Serial Console Cable. Juniper Networks FireWalls Interfacing with AV and Home Automation.

Audio visual engineer, control systems for Samsung screens and Orion video walls. Automation Products.

Communicating/Testing with AV devices. With an Hitachi Projector. Serial port from laptop to connect to NEC monitors, Smart projectors, controlling devices and controlling systems. Monitoring Clarks Heating Control System Monitoring Medical Equipment. Medical Sterlisers with serial port. Provides RS232 connection to x-ray devices Communication with Commercial & Scientific Equipment.

Serial Communication port with ANABAT bat detector using a PC with no available RS232 port. Connecting GPS to PC. Interfacing with a Davis Automatic Weather Station and Datalogger. Serial port adapter for running scientific instruments. To control serial based instrumentation equipment.

to talk to Suunto Zoop dive computers over rs232. As a serial connection for a scale to weigh our product hourly. PFC Flight Simulator controls. DMM's (Digital MultiMeters). Garmin Etrex GPS devices.

Level Developments Inclinometer measuring slope of model railway track. Connect a touch screen PC to building management systems via USB serial connection. Interfacing with Legacy Equipment.

Access serial port from Lenovo thinkpad USB port. On a laptop that does not a have serial interface.

Advanced graphic calculators from Texas Instruments. Match Netbook and serial interface.

Attachments: Have you installed the driver in windows? There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it. Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest? I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work. I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo?

Jeff - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.

It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side.

I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 5:36 PM, John Kearney wrote: Have you installed the driver in windows? There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it. Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest?

I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work. I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo? Jeff - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store.

VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe. Are you service it's attached to the guest and not the host? Is it listed in the devices you can attach to the guest? On Jun 28, 2013, at 18:33, SH Development wrote: Yes.

It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in.

It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 5:36 PM, John Kearney wrote: Have you installed the driver in windows? There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it.

Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest? I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work.

I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo?

Jeff - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe.

Reply to message from SH Development on Fri, 28 Jun 2013 18:33:37 -0500 You probably already have set this up, but I had to experiment with XP and get it to assign a com port then turn on the Com port in the VBox settings for that VM. Don't turn it on as USB, just Com Port. In my case I assigned Com3 in XP and VBox and it works fine.

It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 5:36 PM, John Kearney wrote: Have you installed the driver in windows? There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it.

Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest? I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work. I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo?

Jeff. I'm using Win7, not XP, but shouldn't be major issue. The only scenario in which I can get the VM to boot is if I choose 'Disconnected' in the settings for the serial port. Any other setting causes VB to hang, leaving the MacBook unable to force quit, requiring a hard power-off reboot.

I have tried both Host Device and Host Pipe, both cause the machine to lock up to the point requiring a power-button restart. Disabled USB in the settings and set the port to 'Disconnected' to get the VM to boot. If I set com1 in the serial port settings, it always shows up as com3 in Windows. Don't know why.

VB boots, but with the setting of 'Disconnected', of course my serial port application in Windows doesn't communicate. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 8:06 PM, Cliff Scott wrote:. Reply to message from SH Development on Fri28 Jun 2013 18:33:37 -0500 You probably already have set this up, but I had to experiment with XP and get it to assign a com port then turn on the Com port in the VBox settings for that VM. Don't turn it on as USB, just Com Port.

In my case I assigned Com3 in XP and VBox and it works fine. It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side.

I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 5:36 PM, John Kearney wrote: Have you installed the driver in windows?

There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it. Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id.

On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest? I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work. I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo? Jeff - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@.

Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe. Reply to message from SH Development on Fri, 28 Jun 2013 21:08:44 -0500 Jeff, I just rechecked my VBox settings and they are as follows: USB 2.0 = On Serial COM3 (XP assigned Com3 so I set that in VBox) Port Mode = Host Device Port/file path = /dev/cu.serial For the port/file path I looked in the /dev directory and found the info. The options were cu.serial or tty.serial. Some people have to use tty.serial, only cu.serial works for me. You don't mention setting Port/file path so that may be the issue or maybe not. Sorry I don't know how this affects Win7.

Cliff I'm using Win7, not XP, but shouldn't be major issue. The only scenario in which I can get the VM to boot is if I choose 'Disconnected' in the settings for the serial port. Any other setting causes VB to hang, leaving the MacBook unable to force quit, requiring a hard power-off reboot. I have tried both Host Device and Host Pipe, both cause the machine to lock up to the point requiring a power-button restart.

Disabled USB in the settings and set the port to 'Disconnected' to get the VM to boot. If I set com1 in the serial port settings, it always shows up as com3 in Windows. Don't know why. VB boots, but with the setting of 'Disconnected', of course my serial port application in Windows doesn't communicate. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 8:06 PM, Cliff Scott wrote:. Reply to message from SH Development on Fri28 Jun 2013 18:33:37 -0500 You probably already have set this up, but I had to experiment with XP and get it to assign a com port then turn on the Com port in the VBox settings for that VM.

Don't turn it on as USB, just Com Port. In my case I assigned Com3 in XP and VBox and it works fine. Yes. It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing.

The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Jeff On Jun 28, 2013, at 5:36 PM, John Kearney wrote: Have you installed the driver in windows? There is no usb serial class so there is no class driver for it. Windows has the drive natively but it need a driver to know to use it with that specific vendor and device id. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 11:54 PM, SH Development wrote: Has anyone EVER gotten one of these to work with OSX Host/Windows7 Guest?

I have tried every possible combination of settings and have literally spent a combined total of 40+ hours trying to make this work. I have tried different brand adapters, no luck. Is there some trick about doing this or is it just a given that it won't work and I missed the memo? Jeff. Reply to message from Fernando Cassia on Sat, 29 Jun 2013 11:56:06 -0300 On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 8:33 PM, SH Development wrote: The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. Just my $0.02 worth: brand doesn't matter, chipset does.

when it comes to RS232-usb adapters, ones with FTDI chipset are the only ones that consistently deliver, all others are JUNK. And dont use whatever outdated CD comes with the adapters, go to the FTDI web page and download the latest drivers. Thats why in Amazon.com the chipset is identified.

See here: Hope this helps. FC Fernando, I'm afraid that your broad judgement on 'all others are junk' is a bit too broad. I haven't tried all the 'others', but have been using a Prolific 2303 for over a year now on 64 bit OSx 10.7.5. Cost me $8.49 including shipping. I use it directly in OSx to run Fldigi and in WinXP in VBox to run Winlink. Maybe other applications would have problems with it, but not these. I second the idea of getting the latest drivers however.

Reply to message from Fernando Cassia on Sat, 29 Jun 2013 22:30:16 -0300 On Sat, Jun 29, 2013 at 9:03 PM, Cliff Scott wrote: I'm afraid that your broad judgement on 'all others are junk' is a bit too broad. Yes, you're right my comment was too broad, I meant 'all other cables I have tried were junk'. I dont mean to imply FTDI are the only good ones. Just the only good ones I know about. But it was cables with Prolific chipset the ones that made me go through 'drivers hell' on Windows machines. Prolific says on its web page that there are copied versions of its chip set, and that because of that newer drivers detect 'fake' ones and refuse to work.

' Warning Notice: Please be warned that counterfeit (fake) PL-2303HX (Chip Rev A) USB to Serial Controller ICs using our name, and device drivers, were being sold in the China market. Counterfeit IC products show exactly the same outside chip markings but generally are of poor quality and causes Windows driver compatibility issues (Yellow Mark Error Code 10). We issue this warning to all our customers and consumers to avoid confusion and false purchase.' Well, if a company cant protect its IP or fight knock-offs being sold in the open market, and not a dark street corner, it s certainly a firm I dont want to do business with. 'Avoid confusion and false purchase'.

The nerve of this people! How am I supposed to know? Have they heard about holograms? (like some Taiwanese wifi vendors implemented), or codes I could enter on its web site to check?).

Serial

They say nothing about that, so I guess you buy a Prolific cable and you mightas well flip a coin to know if it s legit or fake. They cant even speak English for Gods sake. What is a false purchase? a purchase made by con men, that doesn't actually happen? A visual trick? Ohh they meant 'avoid confusion and the purchas of a false unit'.

Now I get it. see also I dont know if that was the cause, but most of the Made in China USB rs232 cables available for cheap down here have a Prolific chipset inside. I had to go to great lengths to find ones with FTDI chipset,and the difference was day and night, flawless operation from minute one with FTDI. Drivers hell with Prolific. My suggestion remains, unless you buy something with a 'known good' chipset like FTDI, chances are, you are asking yourself for trouble. I hope you dont work for Prolific or one of its distributors and felt offended, but that's my experience.

If you ever visit Argentina and drop by you can have the 4 or 5 JUNK CABLES that are taking space in my drawer. FC I'm not offended. You've had a bad experience. I haven't yet. I suppose their drivers not working on the copied chips is their way of telling you that you got a bad one, but of course they should come right out and say this chip is not a real one so you know it isn't a software problem. If you want to find fault with their English I could point to your spelling and say with almost every email program out there a spell checker is available, why not use it, but of course I wouldn't say that. On Sun, Jun 30, 2013 at 12:36 PM, Cliff Scott wrote: If you want to find fault with their English I could point to your spelling and say with almost every email program out there a spell checker is available, why not use itbut of course I wouldn't say that.

Not everyone takes good care of casual emails. (I try to, but the odd typo slips through and doesn't much bother me.) Published documents can be copyedited. It reflects badly on a company to have its official documentation done sloppily. On Sat, Jun 29, 2013 at 11:36 PM, Cliff Scott wrote: I'm not offended. You've had a bad experience.

I haven't yet. I suppose their drivers not working on the copied chips is their way of telling you that you got a bad one, but of course they should come right out and say this chip is not a real one so you know it isn't a software problem. I didn't want to elaborate on my troubles, but suffice to say that the cables worked poorly only with the drivers included on the CD, faults included: -only worked at 9600bps or lower port speed -'hanging' when changing the port speed, to the point I had to unplug the cable and plug it again to get it to work again.' noise' (it was not a parity problem) when talking to a modem.

NONE OF THE ABOVE happened with linux, so I guess the FOSS drivers are better than the in-house developed drivers for Windows. BUT, I needed to use the adapter with Windows, not Linux.

Attempting to use newer drivers other than those on the CD resulted in the 'yellow exclamation mark' in Device Manager that they warn about. But perhaps more confusingly, they offer a tool along the newer driver that inquires and shows the chipset version. It worked on my cables and showed the chipset version (I dont remember the details at the moment),when supposedly it would only work on legit chips (so I guess my cables had legit chips, but they still malfunctioned, or should I guess that those were copies, but the copiers got better and managed to impersonate newer chip revisions? I'm not n engineer or interpol detective to deal with all this stuff. Put yourself on my shoes for a minute.

What would you think about Prolific after this. So, that's the long story on why I recommend FTDI and do not recommend Prolific. YMMV And with regards to spelling, please keep in mind that: 1.

English is not my native language 2. I have enough with Spanish (native), Italian (mother's), and some rudimentary Brazilian Portuguese, to be 100% perfect wrt my English spelling 3. I use a tablet -which causes lots of accidental typos 4.

I'm typing on a mailing list, not composing the text that goes on a corporate web site. The bar should be lower for me:) Well, that's it.

I hope I've made myself clearer now. Best regards, FC - During times of Universal Deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act - George Orwell.

Reply to message from Fernando Cassia on Sun, 30 Jun 2013 10:05:35 -0300 On Sat, Jun 29, 2013 at 11:36 PM, Cliff Scott wrote: I'm not offended. You've had a bad experience. I haven't yet.

I suppose their drivers not working on the copied chips is their way of telling you that you got a bad one, but of course they should come right out and say this chip is not a real one so you know it isn't a software problem. I didn't want to elaborate on my troubles, but suffice to say that the cables worked poorly only with the drivers included on the CD, faults included: -only worked at 9600bps or lower port speed -'hanging' when changing the port speed, to the point I had to unplug the cable and plug it again to get it to work again. -'noise' (it was not a parity problem) when talking to a modem. NONE OF THE ABOVE happened with linux, so I guess the FOSS drivers are better than the in-house developed drivers for Windows. BUT, I needed to use the adapter with Windows, not Linux. Attempting to use newer drivers other than those on the CD resulted in the 'yellow exclamation mark' in Device Manager that they warn about. But perhaps more confusingly, they offer a tool along the newer driver that inquires and shows the chipset version.

It worked on my cables and showed the chipset version (I dont remember the details at the moment),when supposedly it would only work on legit chips (so I guess my cables had legit chips, but they still malfunctioned, or should I guess that those were copies, but the copiers got better and managed to impersonate newer chip revisions? I'm not n engineer or interpol detective to deal with all this stuff. Put yourself on my shoes for a minute. What would you think about Prolific after this. So, that's the long story on why I recommend FTDI and do not recommend Prolific. YMMV And with regards to spelling, please keep in mind that: 1. English is not my native language 2.

I have enough with Spanish (native), Italian (mother's), and some rudimentary Brazilian Portuguese, to be 100% perfect wrt my English spelling 3. I use a tablet -which causes lots of accidental typos 4. I'm typing on a mailing list, not composing the text that goes on a corporate web site. The bar should be lower for me:) Well, that's it. I hope I've made myself clearer now. Best regardsFC Fernando, Thanks for the explanation on the issues with the chips. Somehow the one I got worked.

I'm really not making any judgement on your spelling. I have not set any bar for you or anyone else. You do very well for a non-native speaker. I was just trying to give an example of how we can always find fault if we look hard enough at someone or some company and usually it is of no real benefit to anyone to do so. Often it causes more harm than good.

I appreciate how you manage the list and feel bad that Pablo left over what, to me, appeared as total misunderstandings, maybe in part because of language. Let's get on with VBox matters now. Blessings, Cliff. From: SH Development mailto:listaccount@.

Yes. It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in.

It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles.

If it shows up and works on the Mac side. You probably already know this. That means it's connected to the Mac. To connect it to windows, you need to go to. Shoot, I don't have VirtualBox gui available to me right now, so I can't check. In the guest window, you click the Virtualbox menu, and connect the USB device to the guest OS. Not the host.

Also, my understanding is that USB passthru isn't supported unless you have the Oracle Extensions installed. (And this is likely irrelevant, but I wouldn't expect anything to work unless the Guest Additions are installed too. Just superstition.). Attachments: Dear folks: I have VBox 4.2.12 with Win XP SP3 host OS and Linux Mint 15 as guest OS. The external microphone (jack 3.5 mm audio input) doesnt work in the Guest OS. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks a lot for your feedback.

On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 8:49 AM, Edward Ned Harvey (vbox-users) wrote: From: SH Development mailto:listaccount@. Yes. It never shows up. Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles.

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If it shows up and works on the Mac side. You probably already know this. That means it's connected to the Mac. To connect it to windows, you need to go to. Shoot, I don't have VirtualBox gui available to me right now, so I can't check.

In the guest window, you click the Virtualbox menu, and connect the USB device to the guest OS. Not the host.

Also, my understanding is that USB passthru isn't supported unless you have the Oracle Extensions installed. (And this is likely irrelevant, but I wouldn't expect anything to work unless the Guest Additions are installed too. Just superstition.) - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@. Attachments: The first thing I would suggest is to start a new message, with a new subject, that does NOT start as a reply to somebody else's discussion. What you did below is called 'hijacking the thread,' and it's sure to get you no response to your question.

Except responses from people like me, telling you to follow better etiquette. I am also doing something called 'top posting' which means your entire message below is going to be ignored by everybody. For this reason, top posting is also generally discouraged. But in this case, it's appropriate.

Usb Serial Adapter Virtualbox For Mac

From: Damian Nicastro mailto:dnicastro@. Sent: Thursday, July 04, 2013 2:57 PM To: Community mailing list of VirtualBox users Subject: Re: VBox-users USB to serial adapters. Dear folks: I have VBox 4.2.12 with Win XP SP3 host OS and Linux Mint 15 as guest OS. The external microphone (jack 3.5 mm audio input) doesnt work in the Guest OS. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks a lot for your feedback. On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 8:49 AM, Edward Ned Harvey (vbox-users) wrote: From: SH Development mailto:listaccount@.

Yes. It never shows up.

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Plug-n-play never kicks in when a device is plugged in. It shows up and works on the Mac side. I have tried NOT installing it on the Mac and only on Windows still nothing. The result has been the same for several brands (and their respective drivers) of usb/serial dongles. If it shows up and works on the Mac side. You probably already know this.

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That means it's connected to the Mac. To connect it to windows, you need to go to. Shoot, I don't have VirtualBox gui available to me right now, so I can't check. In the guest window, you click the Virtualbox menu, and connect the USB device to the guest OS. Not the host. Also, my understanding is that USB passthru isn't supported unless you have the Oracle Extensions installed. (And this is likely irrelevant, but I wouldn't expect anything to work unless the Guest Additions are installed too.

Just superstition.) - This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. VBox-users-community mailing list VBox-users-community@. Unsubscribe: mailto:vbox-users-community-request@.?subject=unsubscribe.