![]() ![]() The image then shows up on the left side of the window, below your other drives, called “DISK IMAGE”. Open that folder, then click on the “.dmg” to open the ASIX driver installer disk image. Click on that to bring up recent downloads, which looks like this: ![]() If you’re downlading with Safari, look for the Download folder the Lion has in your Dock by default. ![]() Lion moves all systems to a 64-bit kernel, so in the case of a Lion upgrade, you may have to uninstall the old driver (uninstaller included in the driver package), and follow the steps below to get ASIX’s latest driver.ĭownload the Plugable USB2-E1000 (ASIX 88178 chipset) driver from our USB2-E1000 driver page. Note that if you had done this before upgrading to Lion, your old driver may be 32-bit. It looks something like this:įortunately, ASIX has an updated driver which works on Lion 10.7 (and older versions). If you plug one of our Plugable USB2-E1000 USB 2.0 to Gigabit Ethernet Adapters or others based on the ASIX 88178 chipset into an Mac Lion system, Apple will match it with the Apple Gigabit Ethernet driver that’s included in Lion.īut things often fail on non-Apple adapters in a confusing way: it will show as “Connected” in the Network control panel, but connections out won’t work - you’ll notice it has a self-assigned IP address (169.*), no router, and no DNS server. ![]()
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