I do consider it quite possible that this is simply a 10Base-2 NIC, and that MTS supplied such NIC's at one time (to match some ancient DSL modem), even though I don't distinctly remember this from my MTS past.  A hub isn't needed - 10Base-2 has all the stations (computers, etc.) along a linear cable with T-connectors at each of them, even the two end units, and a terminating resistor on the otherwise open-ended T-connector at each of the two ends.
 
Man, I hated wiring the connectors onto those 10Base-2 cables!  Anyone out there old enough to have handled the even older 10Base-5 stuff?  You gotta love RJ-45!
 
Hartmut Sager


On 5 February 2014 09:50, Colin Stanners <cstanners@gmail.com> wrote:
Likely: PC TV-capture card, or they're really confusing an ethernet cable.
Very unlikely: ancient 10base-2 NIC to a hub somewhere with their DSL modem.


On Wed, Feb 5, 2014 at 8:40 AM, Kevin McGregor <kevin.a.mcgregor@gmail.com> wrote:
Friends of my parents have had MTS Internet service for a decade or more (probably more).

They told me that they have a coax cable in the room with their computer (an IBM Pentium 4 3.0 GHz, to give you an idea of the age of this setup; they had MTS Internet service before that in an older computer) AND that this coax cable plugs directly into their PC.Has anyone seen this sort of setup? I didn't look at it myself; this is just what I got from them over the phone just now.

Are they mistaken, or did MTS in the past provide a PC card with a coax connector for Internet access? It's possible that they didn't recognize an Ethernet cable, but I did explicitly ask if it was connected to the computer with a screw-on type connector which they confirmed it was.

Kevin

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