[REVIEW] Inateck TCH4001 USB-C Slim Aluminum Hub - General Accessories

Inateck does it again. I am impressed. This is a solidly built USB-C hub. Everything from the Aluminum case to the short USB-C cord attached to it feel like premium materials.
The unit arrived undamaged in no nonsense, well made packaging. Included are the hub itself and a small instruction booklet.
The hub uses USB-C connectivity and connects: 2 super speed USB 3.0 ports; an SD card reader; a microSD card reader and full size, 4K (@30Hz) HDMI port to your device via USB-C.
This thing is lightning fast. I connected it first to my aging Nexus 6P (Stock, not rooted) and plugged in a USB thumb drive. Instantly, my phone detected the drive... but what about more? My phone was able to detect devices attached to all the ports nearly instantaneously.
My MacBook instantly recognized it as well and it matches the color of my wife's (mine's space gray) nearly perfectly.
I think it's a great price for the quality and usefulness you get from it.
This hub is currently selling for just under $27 at Amazon right now.

Related

My experience with necessary accessories

So I switched from a Motorola Xoom, which I have loved, to a modern, lighter, Note 10.1 from Costco.
I immediately rooted via Darkman's method.
What I really liked about the xoom was the HDMI adapter and OTG.
I travel a lot and being able to hook up to a hotel TV and stream Netflix or episodes of shows has been great.
I found the lack of HDMI port and 30 pin rather frustrating.
Anyways, these are the accessories that I bought and here are my comments:
Samsung Electronics Book Cover for Galaxy Note 10.1-Inch, White (EFC-1G2NWECXAR)
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-Electronics-Galaxy-10-1-Inch-EFC-1G2NWECXAR/dp/B008X46QTO
Review: Great Case. I like the white for my white tablet. I know the camera is not useable with cover on easily, but the magnetic and antislip hold in the 2 positions has been great. In my opinion this case comes the closest to an ipad cover without actually being an ipad cover. The magnetic hold had not affected my S Pen and the cover is skinny and great texture to hold. Worth the $50 IMHO.
OEM USB OTG Connection Kit & Card Reader for SAMSUNG GALAXY TAB 10.1 P7500 P7510 BLACK
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006DQWIKK
Review: The first one did not work, the little button broke and the seller on Amazon sent me a free one, it had worked great so far and I have been able to transfer files back and forth including moves and pictures without a problem. Kind of bulky, and I fear it will break off if any abnormal pressure is applied, but for $4.99 I paid for it it was well worth it to just have around.
ZEEESTM Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 HDTV Adapter:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0059UGT1K
Review: Now this is interesting. I was pissed off that it didn't work the first time. I read the instruction and realized that you need to have the power connected to the HDMI adapter for it to work.. The Note will detect the adapter, but the TV would not unless power is supplied to it. Which is very frustrating compared to the Xoom. I was used to mini HDMI out on Xoom that worked without external power. Now here is the silver lining. You do not need to use the Samsung 2A adapter, I used a 0.5A USB port on the TV and it works, I used a 1A iPhone charger and it worked! The super-silver lining is that generic 0.5A and 1A adapters which cannot usually charge the Note directly, do actually charge the note when connected though the HDMI adapter, even when not connected to an HDMI TV. Can I a get a Hallelujah! Fogetting my Note 2A adapter at home is not an issue, specially when I can run USB and HDMI straight to the TV!!
Aduro Samsung Galaxy Tablet Extra Long USB Charge & Sync Data Cable
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008AJNF78
Review: Great to match my HDMI cable so the Xoom can be 6ft away from the TV.
Lastly, I had a left over Xoom screen protector which I cut around the front camera are and stuck on the Note screen and it works fine with the S-Pen, no bubbles. In other words generic screen protectors work and you dont have to buy a special S Pen friendly one.
Thanks for this post. Just added all this to my wish list
Yea. Thanks for the tips.
Didn't like the 30 pin connector and was concerned about the HDMI connection. Your post helped.
very useful tips,thank you.
thank you for your recomendation

Aukey 4-Port USB 3.0 Hub

unit arrived on time and packaging was well done and i like the fact that Aukey uses materials that are recyclable which i thought was a great plus. the unit is aluminum and has a great look and feel and nothing flimsy like some other units i have had. unit has 4 usb ports and one blue LED to notify that the hub is connected to the computer, very simple to use and see that your connected. The port that is used to connect to the computer is on the left hand side while the ports at the top are used to connect peripherals. The bottom also has two non-skid rubber feet at the bottom which i really liked and made unit secure on my table and didn't move around when connecting a hard drive or other usb items.the 2ft usb 3.0 cable provided was plenty of cable but not too much so you don't have extra cable laying all over your workstation and unit itself uses its small size very well also. Package contents: Aukey 4-Port Hub, 2FT USB 3.0 Cable, Instruction Manual. Free lifetime technical support and 18 months warranty. the free technical support was a nice added touch you dont get with alot of other retailers and one i liked to see. data transfer rates of up to 5Gbps, you'll be able to sync files and interact with your Mac or PC more efficiently than ever; backwards compatibility with USB 2.0 / 1.1. overall i loved the simple design and great looking unit and highly recommend this product

USB-C to USB 3.1 Adapter

What's everyone's thoughts on this adapter? Think it will work on the OnePlus 2? I'm temped to pick one up since it's so cheap.
$4.99 + Free Shipping
http://www.rakuten.com/prod/usb-c-t...&rmatt=tsid:1012038|cid:4438|cgid:44383068684
its the wrong one dont you want micro usb in and type c out not usb in
From what I've seen USB otg doesn't work ATM, it was ballsed up a few updates ago
Should work fine though once it's been sorted
EBay some micro USB to USB-C adapters. EBay is your friend ?
Sent from my ONE A2001 using Tapatalk
Only the original Oneplus Type-C adapter is working with otg. It seems, this is not a bug, it´s a feature.
Other adapters can only be used for standard data transfer and charging.
Kishes Mist said:
EBay some micro USB to USB-C adapters. EBay is your friend
Sent from my ONE A2001 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So is Amazon... I ordered 3 USB-C cables for $9 each.
i think otg cable from orzly is also working in OP2
http://orzly.com/orzly-type-c-to-female-usb-cable-for-oneplus-two-black.html
I got a three micro b to type c adaptors on EBay from the exotic far east. http://pages.ebay.com/link/?nav=item.view&id=301725222332&alt=web
They do reasonably well with power xfer, sketchy to adequate on data xfer (depending on which example), but are a bit fragile with a hard and slightly brittle plastic. Using the OPO cable or a 1m Kopi cable I can sustain 1750+mah until the phone throttles back the charging rate (measured with USB multimeter and Battery Monitor Widget).
I expect that a better quality adaptor would be more rugged but not have huge performance gains outside of connection stability (quite important if you need to xfer large amounts of data in small chunks.

IQIYI MFi Certified 3-in-1 USB Charging Cable Review

Hi folks!
For the last few weeks, I've started to feel a need of getting a cable that can be used to charge my devices with different ports. My current device, Xperia X has a standard micro USB port, while the other phones I have are equipped with USB type C port. Using connectors is as painful as it can be because those small things often disappear
After browsing the Web for a while, I decided to give IQIYI MFi Certified 3-in-1 USB Charging Cable a try. While I can't pronounce a name of the company, the quality of the cable is really good. It is made of plastic (obviously), it has no braiding and offers three types of connectivity. By default, you can charge/sync micro USB device, but one of two attached connectors quickly changes the type of the charger to either USB Type C or Lightning. I'm not a fan of iPhones, but I lent the cable to one of my friends, and it has passed the compatibility test (ergo, iPhone was not complaining about not original charger).
It's not the cheapest cable available on the market, but you can get it for roughly $12. More info on its Amazon page.

Note 10 Dex on Atrix Lapdock ( didn't want to hijeack the other HP Elite X3 topic )

Here's to let everyone know that dex on the Note 10 works with the old Atrix lapdock very well
In case anyone has one lying around and wants to see it in action, you would want the following accessories:
1. USB-C to HDMI adapter ( I opted for 1 with HDMI, USB 3.0 & USB-C in for power )
2. micro HDMI to HDMI cable
3. Female micro HDMI to Female micro HDMI adapter
Optional:
1. Modified USB A to micro USB cable ( more on this later )
2. Female micro USB to Female micro USB adapter
3. USB Cable + Charger to charge your phone
If all you want is to bring up dex on your lapdock, all you need are the HDMI connectors. You will want to use a Bluetooth keyboard & mouse to navigate dex and will not be able to charge your phone.
Going 1 step further, you can use a multi-function USB-C adapter with HDMI, USB OTG & USB in for power.
Here, you would modify a usb cable to give you access to the lapdock keyboard & mousepad. The lapdock was designed to be an all-in-one setup with the Atrix phone, so the 10 hour battery could also charge the Atrix. <-- That's our problem. So you will need to snip the RED wire in the usb cable to prevent the lapdock from potentially frying your phone or other devices.
Theoretically, you can charge the phone using the 2 usb ports on the back of the lapdock, but it's a trickle effect. It'll take forever and you won't be happy. I did it in a pinch & running any applications under dex still consumed my phone's battery. Plugging it into a charger, though, kept my phone @ 100%.
A big caveat here is the mousepad is NOT multitouch, so I still used my bluetooth mouse for the scroll wheel.
Here's where this becomes a lot of fun... the lapdock screen is great for running emulators in a decent window. I plugged in my shield gamepad with a usb cable into the back of my lapdock and was able to play pretty much anything I wanted to. Still plugged into an outlet kept the phone @ 100% while emulating 100%+ speeds.
The larger screen is also very nice for streaming tv/movies.
There is an option in the Dex control panel to output audio through the HDMI cable, so you aren't relying on your phone for audio.
Anyway, if you have one of these gems lying around, it's a great way to extend the value of this phone.
ycavan said:
Here's to let everyone know that dex on the Note 10 works with the old Atrix lapdock very well
In case anyone has one lying around and wants to see it in action, you would want the following accessories:
1. USB-C to HDMI adapter ( I opted for 1 with HDMI, USB 3.0 & USB-C in for power )
2. micro HDMI to HDMI cable
3. Female micro HDMI to Female micro HDMI adapter
Optional:
1. Modified USB A to micro USB cable ( more on this later )
2. Female micro USB to Female micro USB adapter
3. USB Cable + Charger to charge your phone
If all you want is to bring up dex on your lapdock, all you need are the HDMI connectors. You will want to use a Bluetooth keyboard & mouse to navigate dex and will not be able to charge your phone.
Going 1 step further, you can use a multi-function USB-C adapter with HDMI, USB OTG & USB in for power.
Here, you would modify a usb cable to give you access to the lapdock keyboard & mousepad. The lapdock was designed to be an all-in-one setup with the Atrix phone, so the 10 hour battery could also charge the Atrix. <-- That's our problem. So you will need to snip the RED wire in the usb cable to prevent the lapdock from potentially frying your phone or other devices.
Theoretically, you can charge the phone using the 2 usb ports on the back of the lapdock, but it's a trickle effect. It'll take forever and you won't be happy. I did it in a pinch & running any applications under dex still consumed my phone's battery. Plugging it into a charger, though, kept my phone @ 100%.
A big caveat here is the mousepad is NOT multitouch, so I still used my bluetooth mouse for the scroll wheel.
Here's where this becomes a lot of fun... the lapdock screen is great for running emulators in a decent window. I plugged in my shield gamepad with a usb cable into the back of my lapdock and was able to play pretty much anything I wanted to. Still plugged into an outlet kept the phone @ 100% while emulating 100%+ speeds.
The larger screen is also very nice for streaming tv/movies.
There is an option in the Dex control panel to output audio through the HDMI cable, so you aren't relying on your phone for audio.
Anyway, if you have one of these gems lying around, it's a great way to extend the value of this phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Annoyingly I have a Atrix lapdock but I'm not confident about the rewiring so found a good discounted HP Elite X3 lapdock. Only if someone sold the full cable and adaptor package on eBay for the Atrix
haha, it sounds more complicated than it actually is
just remember that the RED cable in the micro usb cables is power, so that's the only one that needs cutting. What I did was:
1. cut the usb cable in half
2. strip a little bit of the non-RED cables and twisted them together.
3. use electrical tape to cover each of the re-attached cables.
4. pull the red leads back onto the black sheathe
5. use electrical tape to go over the junction between the 2 halves of the cable.
All of the other components are things that are easy to order online, Amazon.
ycavan said:
haha, it sounds more complicated than it actually is
just remember that the RED cable in the micro usb cables is power, so that's the only one that needs cutting. What I did was:
1. cut the usb cable in half
2. strip a little bit of the non-RED cables and twisted them together.
3. use electrical tape to cover each of the re-attached cables.
4. pull the red leads back onto the black sheathe
5. use electrical tape to go over the junction between the 2 halves of the cable.
All of the other components are things that are easy to order online, Amazon.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay I'll order cables and have a go!
Please confirm the 3rd item in your list is a micro hdmi female to micro hdmi female as elsewhere I have seen micro female to standard female. Thanks
jah said:
Okay I'll order cables and have a go!
Please confirm the 3rd item in your list is a micro hdmi female to micro hdmi female as elsewhere I have seen micro female to standard female. Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I use a micro hdmi female to female adapter for my micro hdmi male to normal hdmi male cable.
Suggestion
My take on these DeX apps is straightforward: they’re not great. If you just use them for simple tasks like texting, copying and pasting small bits of text, or dragging and dropping a file or two, it’s fine. Pushing any harder than that is likely to be a recipe for sorrow, however, as things tend to get laggy pretty quickly. I think that’s more the fault of the desktop software than the phone’s hardware, but regardless, it’s slightly disappointing.
I don’t think that’s a reason to avoid buying the Note 10, which is still an excellent phone. But the experience did get me thinking: why did I and so many others have the objectively irrational hope that DeX would unlock new ways of interacting with your phone?
I think it’s because the idea of making a sole computer sits right next to flying cars in the “this is what the future will be” section of our collective unconsciousness.
alexhalessays said:
My take on these DeX apps is straightforward: they’re not great. If you just use them for simple tasks like texting, copying and pasting small bits of text, or dragging and dropping a file or two, it’s fine. Pushing any harder than that is likely to be a recipe for sorrow, however, as things tend to get laggy pretty quickly. I think that’s more the fault of the desktop software than the phone’s hardware, but regardless, it’s slightly disappointing.
I don’t think that’s a reason to avoid buying the Note 10, which is still an excellent phone. But the experience did get me thinking: why did I and so many others have the objectively irrational hope that DeX would unlock new ways of interacting with your phone?
I think it’s because the idea of making a sole computer sits right next to flying cars in the “this is what the future will be” section of our collective unconsciousness.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Also if you can run DeX well on a lapdock, you may not need a Samsung Tab S6!.
alexhalessays said:
My take on these DeX apps is straightforward: they’re not great. If you just use them for simple tasks like texting, copying and pasting small bits of text, or dragging and dropping a file or two, it’s fine. Pushing any harder than that is likely to be a recipe for sorrow, however, as things tend to get laggy pretty quickly. I think that’s more the fault of the desktop software than the phone’s hardware, but regardless, it’s slightly disappointing.
I don’t think that’s a reason to avoid buying the Note 10, which is still an excellent phone. But the experience did get me thinking: why did I and so many others have the objectively irrational hope that DeX would unlock new ways of interacting with your phone?
I think it’s because the idea of making a sole computer sits right next to flying cars in the “this is what the future will be” section of our collective unconsciousness.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I use DeX with my lapdock instead of my "real" laptop a lot of the time. My emails are on my phone, contacts are on my phone, pretty much all of the gaming apps I use are on my phone. The only time I ever really need my laptop is to play high end games that aren't ported to Android. Now, if only LoD would come out for the note10... :/
Does the Note 10 support the old 1366x768 resolution on the Atrix Lapdock? I remember getting it going on my Note 8 and it's not a supported resolution leading to really unusable low-res blocky everything on the screen.
bchliu said:
Does the Note 10 support the old 1366x768 resolution on the Atrix Lapdock? I remember getting it going on my Note 8 and it's not a supported resolution leading to really unusable low-res blocky everything on the screen.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup.
Okay, managed to get my old Motorola Atrix working with my Note 10+. Took a different route to the one described above as the female to female couplers are not easy to source. So I used the Rasberry PI cables for the Atrix and my Samsung Note 8 Dex hub, which was free with the Note 8. But I have to use a BT mouse. Otherwise a good solution. But I would recommend the HP Elite X3 lapdock instead if there is not much a price difference on eBay.
ycavan said:
Here's to let everyone know that dex on the Note 10 works with the old Atrix lapdock very well
In case anyone has one lying around and wants to see it in action, you would want the following accessories:
1. USB-C to HDMI adapter ( I opted for 1 with HDMI, USB 3.0 & USB-C in for power )
2. micro HDMI to HDMI cable
3. Female micro HDMI to Female micro HDMI adapter
Optional:
1. Modified USB A to micro USB cable ( more on this later )
2. Female micro USB to Female micro USB adapter
3. USB Cable + Charger to charge your phone
If all you want is to bring up dex on your lapdock, all you need are the HDMI connectors. You will want to use a Bluetooth keyboard & mouse to navigate dex and will not be able to charge your phone.
Going 1 step further, you can use a multi-function USB-C adapter with HDMI, USB OTG & USB in for power.
Here, you would modify a usb cable to give you access to the lapdock keyboard & mousepad. The lapdock was designed to be an all-in-one setup with the Atrix phone, so the 10 hour battery could also charge the Atrix. <-- That's our problem. So you will need to snip the RED wire in the usb cable to prevent the lapdock from potentially frying your phone or other devices.
Theoretically, you can charge the phone using the 2 usb ports on the back of the lapdock, but it's a trickle effect. It'll take forever and you won't be happy. I did it in a pinch & running any applications under dex still consumed my phone's battery. Plugging it into a charger, though, kept my phone @ 100%.
A big caveat here is the mousepad is NOT multitouch, so I still used my bluetooth mouse for the scroll wheel.
Here's where this becomes a lot of fun... the lapdock screen is great for running emulators in a decent window. I plugged in my shield gamepad with a usb cable into the back of my lapdock and was able to play pretty much anything I wanted to. Still plugged into an outlet kept the phone @ 100% while emulating 100%+ speeds.
The larger screen is also very nice for streaming tv/movies.
There is an option in the Dex control panel to output audio through the HDMI cable, so you aren't relying on your phone for audio.
Anyway, if you have one of these gems lying around, it's a great way to extend the value of this phone.
[/QUOT
ycavan said:
Here's to let everyone know that dex on the Note 10 works with the old Atrix lapdock very well
In case anyone has one lying around and wants to see it in action, you would want the following accessories:
1. USB-C to HDMI adapter ( I opted for 1 with HDMI, USB 3.0 & USB-C in for power )
2. micro HDMI to HDMI cable
3. Female micro HDMI to Female micro HDMI adapter
Optional:
1. Modified USB A to micro USB cable ( more on this later )
2. Female micro USB to Female micro USB adapter
3. USB Cable + Charger to charge your phone
If all you want is to bring up dex on your lapdock, all you need are the HDMI connectors. You will want to use a Bluetooth keyboard & mouse to navigate dex and will not be able to charge your phone.
Going 1 step further, you can use a multi-function USB-C adapter with HDMI, USB OTG & USB in for power.
Here, you would modify a usb cable to give you access to the lapdock keyboard & mousepad. The lapdock was designed to be an all-in-one setup with the Atrix phone, so the 10 hour battery could also charge the Atrix. <-- That's our problem. So you will need to snip the RED wire in the usb cable to prevent the lapdock from potentially frying your phone or other devices.
Theoretically, you can charge the phone using the 2 usb ports on the back of the lapdock, but it's a trickle effect. It'll take forever and you won't be happy. I did it in a pinch & running any applications under dex still consumed my phone's battery. Plugging it into a charger, though, kept my phone @ 100%.
A big caveat here is the mousepad is NOT multitouch, so I still used my bluetooth mouse for the scroll wheel.
Here's where this becomes a lot of fun... the lapdock screen is great for running emulators in a decent window. I plugged in my shield gamepad with a usb cable into the back of my lapdock and was able to play pretty much anything I wanted to. Still plugged into an outlet kept the phone @ 100% while emulating 100%+ speeds.
The larger screen is also very nice for streaming tv/movies.
There is an option in the Dex control panel to output audio through the HDMI cable, so you aren't relying on your phone for audio.
Anyway, if you have one of these gems lying around, it's a great way to extend the value of this phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi, I'm trying to do the same. I've got a Note 10+ hooked up to my old Atrix lapdock. Note goes to a multiport adapter. From the adapter's USB-A output, I ran a cable to the lapdock's micro-USB. From the adapter's HDMI out, I ran a cable to the lapdock's mini-HDMI. With that, I can use the lapdock's screen but no keyboard or trackpad.
I ran a cable from the adapter's USB-C to one of the lapdock's rear USB ports, after snipping the red wire, but still no kb/m. The phone does charge like this though.
What have I done wrong? TIA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The USB cable going to the micro-USB port on the lapdock needs to have the red cable snipped. What I did was to snip the red cable and pull both snipped ends back, then use a bit of electrical tape to cover that part of the wire so the snipped ends don't accidentally touch anything.
The USB cable(s) going to the rear of the lapdock are fine unmodified.
Dude/Dudette thank you so much!!! It's only because I came across your thread here that I decided to try and resurrect my trusty old lapdock, and now it works perfectly!
Thanks for replying so quickly. I modified the wrong cable - snipped the red wire on the USB cable running to the rear USB-A port. Doh!
ycavan said:
The USB cable going to the micro-USB port on the lapdock needs to have the red cable snipped. What I did was to snip the red cable and pull both snipped ends back, then use a bit of electrical tape to cover that part of the wire so the snipped ends don't accidentally touch anything.
The USB cable(s) going to the rear of the lapdock are fine unmodified.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

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