A55d98c_thumbs.jpg Info

High-quality EZSync serial cables and USB adapters for reliable data communication with medical devices, industrial equipment, and more.

Our Professional Serial Cables

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Why Choose Our Cables?

Wide Compatibility

Our cables support various interfaces including USB to RS232, RS485, TTL, and work with medical devices, industrial equipment, and communication systems.

Reliable Performance

Built with FTDI chipsets and quality components for stable data transmission and long-lasting durability in demanding environments.

Expert Support

Our technical support team is ready to assist with product selection, driver installation, and troubleshooting to ensure your success.

Compatibility and Software

Device Compatibility Chart

Our cables are compatible with a wide range of medical devices and equipment. Check the chart below to find your device.

Device Compatibility Chart

Click on the chart to zoom in

FTDI Drivers

Most of our cables use FTDI USB-to-Serial technology. These drivers are required for Windows and Mac computers to recognize your serial cable or USB adapter.

Windows FTDI Driver

Compatible with Windows 10, 11 and higher

Download for Windows
Mac FTDI Driver

Compatible with macOS 10.9 and higher

Download for Mac

A55d98c_thumbs.jpg Info

In the photo, Elias was standing in his own office, but his shadow was pointing toward the desk lamp, and his arm was raised, caught in a wave he didn't remember making.

When he double-clicked it, his screen flickered. The thumbnail showed a person standing on a mountain ridge, their arm raised as if waving. But there was a glitch: the person’s shadow stretched in the wrong direction, pointing toward the sun instead of away from it. A55D98C_thumbs.jpg

He deleted the file, but when he looked at his phone's camera roll, the latest photo—taken automatically by the front-facing lens—was titled A55D98C_thumbs(1).jpg . In the photo, Elias was standing in his

Elias tried to "upscale" the image using the library's AI tools. The more he sharpened the pixels, the more the background changed. It wasn't a mountain ridge anymore; it looked like the interior of a massive, hollowed-out structure. The person waving wasn't wearing hiking gear—they were wearing a uniform that wouldn't be designed for another fifty years. But there was a glitch: the person’s shadow

Elias, a digital archivist for the National Library, found it buried in a corrupted 2004 backup from a defunct meteorological station in the Pyrenees. Most of the data was junk, but this one image remained uncorrupted.

The file was only 12 kilobytes—a tiny, pixelated square titled A55D98C_thumbs.jpg .

That night, Elias received an automated alert. The file A55D98C_thumbs.jpg had begun to replicate. It wasn't a virus; it was replacing every thumbnail in his personal photo gallery. His graduation photos, his wedding, his vacation shots—all of them were now 12kb squares of a person waving from a future that hadn't happened yet.

What Our Customers Say

"Excellent quality USB to RS232 cable. Works flawlessly with our industrial equipment. Fast shipping and responsive customer support made the experience even better."

- John D.

"Perfect cable for my medical device data downloads. The build quality is outstanding and it's very reliable. Technical support was helpful when I had driver questions."

- Sarah M.

"We use these cables for programming radios and they work perfectly. Durable construction and great compatibility across different systems. Highly recommended!"

- Michael R.