USB 2 Devices Not Necessarily High-Speed 268
mgcsinc writes "Yahoo is running a story on how some manufacturers of "USB 2.0" devices are making hardware compatible with the USB 2.0 standard, but not necessarily its high-speed component." Sounds like the complaint raised earlier this year.
But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Long answer:
Have you never heard of a USB storage device? There are tons of uses for USB 2.0. Also, it's not just about speed, it's about false advertising. When I buy a USB 2 device, I expect a USB 2 device, not a USB 1 device.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2, Insightful)
If someone labeled a 10Mbit card as a 100Mbit card and tried selling it, they would get sued for false advertising. And yes, I do get angry if I can't get 100Mb/sec over my ethernet connection.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
My point was (assuming I actually had one) that 100Base-T never actually delivers 100Mbps. If you excpect it to, and get angry when it doesn't, you'll be angry a lot.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2, Funny)
'jfb
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
eth0 10663.285 54.074 10717.359
max: 11355.107 58.747 11413.854
A peak of 11355.107 KBytes/sec transfer over my 100mbit card and an average rate of over 10000 during the entire transfer, maybe not quite the full 100mbit speed, but its pretty close, and taking into account overheads etc.. This benchmark was taken from copying a file over NFS from a 250mhz IRIX machine to my linux workstat
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:4, Informative)
No, but if someone took a 11 MBit device and labelled it as USB 2.0 then I would not like that at all.
(Now with the new asinine naming convention, USB 2.0 "Full Speed" is actually 11 MBit, so it might not be false advertising.)
You have to look for the "USB 2.0 High Speed" marking to be sure that it's 480 MBit/s.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Insightful)
So then a mouse should be USB 1, not 2. If it doesn't go at USB2 speeds, it shouldn't be called USB 2. Manufacturers are labeling USB 1 things as USB 2 to increase sales while deliberately misleading people. That is clearly wrong, and should be stopped.
Keyboards and Mice (Score:2)
If a consumer just looks at boxes and buys it because "2.0 is higher than 1.1: it must be newer/better," then they deserve what they get. All they have to do is look at the box or ask someone in the department to explain the difference and th
Re:Keyboards and Mice (Score:4, Insightful)
If a consumer just looks at boxes and buys it because "2.0 is higher than 1.1: it must be newer/better," then they deserve what they get. All they have to do is look at the box or ask someone in the department to explain the difference and they'll realize there's no benefit.
I'm sure the salesman would be happy to convince the customer to buy the less expensive USB1 mouse, instead of the USB2 mouse that is exactly the same except for the price. Also, if you put a USB1 device on a hub with USB2 devices, ALL of them will run at USB1 speeds.
I do think it's amoral of companies to do this, the customer isn't losing anything. If it were an external hard drive, they would have a case.
Companies are starting to market USB1 drives as USB2. They are effectively lying to consumers to increase thier profits, and it looks like you are fine with it. Have fun with your new USB2 hard drive enclosure!
Re:Keyboards and Mice (Score:2)
But I need a USB 2.0 Keyboard..... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Keyboards and Mice (Score:3, Informative)
Nitpick, and grossly untrue. As a matter of fact USB2 hubs have a TT controller (transaction tuba or some crap) each port of a USB2 hub acts as a seperate controller to 1.1 devices. That means 4 11Mpbs USB1.1 devices plugged into a USB2 hub each have the full 11Mbps of a seperate bus. You seem to think that version numbers should be used in marketing. The USB-IF has said multiple times that USB2 is not a
Re:Keyboards and Mice (Score:2)
Perhaps they just want high keyboard repeat rates?
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Informative)
But is does "go at USB2 speeds": they run at the USB 2.0 "Low Speed" (1.5Mbps).
802.11b runs at 1Mbps, 2Mbps, 5.5Mbps, or 11Mbps. USB 2.0 runs at 1.5Mbps ("Low Speed"), 12Mbps ("Full Speed", what a stupid name), or 480Mbps ("High Speed"). People just need to understand that the name of the standard doesn't relate to a specific transfer speed.
The real problem is if manufacturers don't list on the packaging what actual data rate they do use. Don't support manufacturers that don't provide you the information you want to know.
-Richard L. OwensRe:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Informative)
USB2 IS a protocol, it supports USB1 and USB1.1 protcols
USB2 IS NOT a specific speed
So if claims on a mouse says it supports USB2 but only requires the USB1.1 or USB1 protocol to work, that's okay. However if it says it runs at High Speed USB (400mbps) but really only runs at Full Speed USB (12mbps or what ever it is...) then that's false advertising.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Interesting)
The standard does allow low-,full-, and high-speed devices. Why is this a bad thing? The hardware for a high-speed (480Mbps) device is SIGNIFIGANTLY more complex than that of a full- or low-speed device. The chips are more expensive and the layout issues for making a board work with high-speed mean it's really not worth the effort for anything that doesn't really need it.
The standard is fine (in that respect, anyway...). What would be nice, however, if there was a more obvious naming scheme (if someone had asked me if a full-speed or high-speed device was faster before I made a career out of it, I probably wouldn't have known...) and if when a device got logo certified by the USB-IF they got assigned either different logo based on speed.
That said, every USB device I've used lately has said on the box which speed it was (full, high, or low)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2, Informative)
As I noted in my last post higher in the thread, USB2 hubs use a TT controller for 1.1 devices that essentially gives attached 1.1 devices their own seperate bus. You absolutely DO NOT revert the bus to a lower speed.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:3, Informative)
This has probably been said a dozen times, but no-one's moderating down incorrect statements (why isn't there a -1:wrong?), so I'll reply aGAIN:
There are two logos- the basic one [usb.org] and one that adds "hi-speed" [usb.org] to that.
the whole scoop [usb.org]
Now here's what I don't get: The USB-IF throws up their hands at this confustion, saying:
High speed clickage (Score:2, Funny)
Roommate1: Whoa, what's wrong with Tod? It looks like he's having a seizure or something?
Roommate2: Naw, he's fine, he's just surfing the net after 2 quad-lattes & a couple of red bulls.
Unanswered questions (Score:2)
Not necessarily. But it does need to not force every other device on the same hub down to the lower speed. Supposedly, when you put a USB 1.0 device on a USB 2 hub, it can limit all the devices on that hub to USB 1.0 speeds. I haven't verified this personally, and don't know whether USB 2 devices that don't run at the high speed limit the speed of other devices on the hub or not - the article doesn't even cover this.
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2)
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2, Informative)
The reason plugging a 1.1 device into a USB Hub that then plugs into a -SINGLE- USB 2.0 port slows everything else on the Hub down is that the Hub is plugged into a single port, which has its own bus. You slow that individual USB bus down to 1.1 speeds. The other USB 2.0 ports on your computer have a separate communications bus that continue to operate at the expected 2.0
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2, Informative)
When USB was new each USB port on your system was attached to the same USB backplane. The bandwidth was therefore shared between all ports on your system, exactly like a hub.
Today it is commonplace to have a seperate backplane for each port. So plugging in a USB 1.1 device to one USB 2.0 port will not affect other USB 2.0 ports. That is because they're on different backplanes, not because the USB 1.1 device isn't slowing down the USB 2.0 bus.
Now, if you were to plug in a USB 2.0 hub i
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not familiar with the details of how USB arbitration works, but a simplistic example would say that if one slow device and one fast device were c
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2)
and you said:
Do you have a 2.0 hub to try plugging one of your USB 1.0 devices into, and then measure the speed of the flash reader? Has anyone else tried this to either confirm or deny its trut
You're forgetting mass storage (Score:2)
For example, there exist external hard disks and MP3 players that connect to the computer through USB. These need all the bandwidth that they can get. The more you can transfer, faster it can get done. Moreover, I actually have a USB mouse that doubles as a memory stick reader. Does it need transfer speeds of up to 400mbps? Well, it sure would
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Not at first glance, but while a mouse by itself does not need this kind of bandwidth sustained other devices on the same chain just might. So if the mouse gets what little info it has to send out of the way 40 times faster then that just clears up the bus more quickly and lets the higher speed devices back in the action faster.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:But do they NEED it? Yes, they do. (Score:2)
To your point, though, if I were limited to 12 Mbps I'd definitely notice that. I might even be damned pissed.
My HP 7550 printer has a CF card reader, and this is the slowest way I've found to transfer images to a PC. It must implement the low-speed 1.5 Mbps conn
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Well, actually, probably yes.
If your mouse works at 480 mbit/sec then it wont slow down anything else on the hub. If it runs in a legacy mode such as 1.5 mbit/sec, everything else timeslices with it and runs much slower.
Michael
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
The fact is that allowing manufacturers to relabel previously USB 1.1 devices as USB 2.0 is confusing as hell. More honestly they would tag devices with
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
Well, if the USB mouse sends slow packets, it blocks the bus for a long time. A lot of "fast" packets fit into one "slow" packet slot. Fast devices will suffer an unproportionally high bandwidth penalty, when you wiggle your el-cheapo USB2 mouse. After all, it's a shared resource.
Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:2)
obviously no, some devices do not and they should be manufactured and labeled as USB 1.0 or 1.1. More appropriately, why call a device USB2.0 if does not incorporate the 2.0 speed? IMHO the device should be proven capable of transmitting at a decided rate to meet requirements for the USB2.0 standard.
Re: for xternal drives Re:But do they NEED it? (Score:5, Interesting)
Exactly right. About 5 weeks ago I copied a lot of files (more than 40G) from my friend's computer onto my USB 2.0 / Firewire external drive. My friend's machine did not have FW but it did have USB 2.0.
If it wasn't for the USB 2.0 connection on his machine, I might be still there at this place waiting for the files to transfer.
Other options for external USB 2.0 devices are video capture devices. You just can't fit a true DV compliant stream into 11 Mbit without lossy compression (and then it's not DV anymore.) Of course this is where firewire shines as well.
ummmm... DV *is* lossy (Score:4, Interesting)
"You just can't fit a true DV compliant stream into 11 Mbit without lossy compression (and then it's not DV anymore.)"
DV is a lossy compression scheme unto itself. It starts right off at 4.1.1 and then does a block compression on top of that. Uncompressed 4.4.4 29.97fps video is like 30 megabytes or so per second.
He also wrote:
"Of course this is where firewire shines as well."
Completely agree. Firewire 1 was faster than USB 1, and now FW2 is faster than USB 2. The problem is, FW is seen as the province of Apple and Sony and the Wintel dittoheads don't want to admit that FW is better for highspeed data transfer and spend a few euros and put a superior Apple/Sony technology in their machines, Bog Ferbid. Especially as it took Apple to drag the wintel world into putting USB into Wintel computers by abandoning ADB / SVideo cable on Apple machines - the irony being that USB is an Intel technology...
Innovation in Wintel is almost impossible - they don't have the profit margins on each machine. So you pay the Apple Tax and get the latest trick kit or you pay the MS tax and run with the herd. Now, if Linux had a competent FW2 driver and a vvideo editor equal to FCP and AfterFX, I'd be all over Linux in a NY minute. But the software isn't there, so I'm sitting here on my G4 laptop editing and processing video...
RS
I pray for the day computers disappear.
Re:ummmm... DV *is* lossy (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, FireWire is still technically better than USB 2. That extra 80 Mbps isn't impressive when one interface is isochronous and the other isn't. Add to that the massive amount of power, compared to USB 2, that FireWire can provide, and FW's ability to communicate p2p-style directly from device to device, and suddenly USB 2 isn't that impressive.
USB 2 is nice to have, but for high-speed devices like DV cams and large disk arrays, FireWire is king.
Re:ummmm... DV *is* lossy (Score:4, Informative)
One use for high bandwidth that was missed is scanning. People who used parallel port connected cheap scanners wouldn't notice - if you've used a nice SCSI flatbed you'll know what I mean. I would mention drum scanners but it would take a very warped mind to create a one of those that connected via USB.
USB 1 was a great interface designed by Intrega for low bandwidth devices such as keyboards, graphics tablets, etc. It was bought by Intel who tried to turn it into a high bandwidth bus.
Is this disingenuous? (Score:4, Insightful)
Should it be necessary that they inform you of the lack of full speed utilization? What if it's faster than USB 1.0 but not FULL speed.
IMO, the only clearcut measure is whether the standard is met, and it seems to be.
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2)
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2, Informative)
But is that the fault of the manufacturer, or the standard setter? This logo is the generic USB 2.0 logo. They've chosen to use that logo, despite the fact that high-speed is only a part of the standard.
A good review of USB 2.0 can be
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2, Insightful)
If Dell sells you a PC with a "Pentium 4 3.2GHz", would you feel a tad bit peeved to discover that, while it actually does have a 3.2GHz P4 in it, they chose a noname chipset that only clocks it at 800MHz?
Because, that would satisfy your condition - It has the advertized part in it, but only clocks it at 25% of its rated maximum.
Yes, people expect (and should expect) a product to make full use of the standards it suppos
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2, Insightful)
USB 2.0 is a standard, not a component. When I buy a computer that advertises certain components, I better damn well get them.
When I buy a product that advertises a certain standard, I better damn well get it. And I am.
We both know there is a problem. I argue that it's not at all the problem of the person who
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2)
For a non-computer analogy, try black jelly beans. Black jelly beans can be either licorice or grape (depending upon the brand). If I buy a bag of black jellybeans, I assume they will be licorice. If they're not, and
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2)
I didn't even know until the first article that USB 2 -could- be dropped into lower bandwith. I am sure I'm not alone.
Now, we start seeing companies without fully developed USB2 high speed implementations dumping USB2 compatible crap onto the market making many people pissed off. I was
This was changed in RESPONSE to customers (Score:2)
Because the USB 2.0 "mark" being used by many manufacturers was never offically sanctioned by the "committee" they decided to change the tradename rather than simply say "tough luck" So Now pretty much everything is USB 2 [note: not USB
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2)
BS. This is the same attitude I was given when I built my first PC from parts. ("Gee, you didn't ask for a full-speed drive controller just a full speed drive!") It was dishonest then -- or at a minimum arrogant snobbery -- and this is no different.
IMO, the only clearcut measure is whether the standard is met, and it seems to be.
Yet, that's not really what was promoted, was it? USB 2 at USB 1 plus a little isn't wh
Re:Is this disingenuous? (Score:2)
I look at the packaging of USB products and not all of them declare what co
Re:Yes, it is!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yes, it is!!! (Score:2)
Whaaa? (Score:2, Funny)
So? (Score:4, Funny)
cost of backwards compatibility (Score:5, Insightful)
So why is everyone whining? Just have the anufacturers put max speed transfer on the boxes as spec sheet. Just dont buy anything from those manufacturers who dont.
And as a sideline about the jab about printers not meing "full-speed", who cares? Paralell printers, in epp/ecp mode, could only transfer max 11Mbps. And since consumer printers dont print very fast, what's the big deal? And it it was made to be fast, it'd have a network jack for 100Mbps connectivity.
GIGABYTE GA-7VAXP Motherboard (Score:3, Informative)
Re:GIGABYTE GA-7VAXP Motherboard (Score:2, Informative)
Re:GIGABYTE GA-7VAXP Motherboard (Score:2)
Surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
bad packaging (Score:3, Insightful)
I see this as one of the more unfortunate side-effects of the mass adoption of computers. Most people will never realize their hardware is crappier than they thought, and the rest of us are told to shut up and be good little consumers. I get my revenge by buying multiple models off the shelf, and returning all but the one that makes the cut.
Stick with Firewire (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Stick with Firewire (Score:2)
When are they going to learn... (Score:5, Insightful)
The computer industry will keep making disceptive ads and lawyers doing class-action suits against them will keep getting rich. My guess is that the computer industry still make more money than they lose to the lawyers, so everyone is better off but the consumer...
Re:When are they going to learn... (Score:2)
Re:When are they going to learn... (Score:2)
Re:When are they going to learn... (Score:2)
Just like:
The computer industry will keep making disceptive ads and lawyers doing class-action suits against them will keep getting rich. My guess is that the computer industry still make more money tha
Choose Firewire. Problem solved. (Score:5, Informative)
Disclaimer: This being /. the above is more with regard to cameras external HDDs, and other hardware which would benefit from the higher speed.
Re:Choose Firewire. Problem solved. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Oh, yeah... (Score:2)
Re:Oh, yeah... (Score:2)
Re:Oh, yeah... (Score:2)
Re:Oh, yeah... (Score:2)
Maybe a firewire audio interface [motu.com] will fit your rather stringent criteria. I don't think you'll find more conventional firewire Human Interface Devices, as there's really no market for them.
Article is rather pointless/common sense (Score:4, Insightful)
All it's saying is that mostly only hard drives and burners are using "hi-speed" USB. We all knew that, right? And if we thought that maybe printer and flash memory readers were really using "hi-speed" we at least knew that they couldn't take advantage of the full bandwidth, right? And we all have come to expect manufacturers to lie to us on the packaging, right?
Yes, it is disappointing that companies are using the USB 2.0 hype to sell lower speed products. But what's the big deal?
The only thing that would really piss me off is if the hard drive and cd/dvd-r burners WEREN'T using "hi-speed" USB 2.0. But the article says they are! Or at least it doesn't say they aren't. And that's my second point: The article doesn't really say much of anything. It only puts the question of authenticity in the reader's mind. I think it is a poorly constructed article and not very worthy of Slashdot attention.
I'm not trying to flame or troll. I am just really missing the significance of this article.
Educated Consumers (Score:2)
Do you know why I was fooled? It was because I had been reading Intel propaganda on USB 2.0 for many months. Every paper on USB 2.0 touted its blazing speed, allegedly making it the equal of Firewire. They didn't say anythi
Re:Article is rather pointless/common sense (Score:2)
A slow-speed USB 2 device will allow the other devices to transfer at their appropriate specified speeds (full speed, high speed, low speed) without effect.
This is old, USB already defined it (Score:5, Informative)
The USB2 does not signify high-speed of course. If you want USB High Speed you need to look for the high speed logo.
as in this image here: http://www.usb.org/images/headermain/2logos.gif
The one on the left is the high speed, one on the right is regular speed. Simple eh?
But `high speed' is faster than `full speed' (Score:2)
Alas, not so simple.
Re:This is old, USB already defined it (Score:2)
I feel ripped off. I have wrote sandisk already.
I'm confused (Score:4, Funny)
Or was it Big Speed?
Wait.
USB2.0 Huge Speed. No, that wasn't it
I'm seriously confused.
The standards: Defined... (Score:5, Informative)
USB 1.1 is the 'old' standard. USB 1.1 defined the 2Mb/s and 12Mb/s speeds ('Low speed' and 'Full speed' respectively.) USB 1.1 devices are fully compatible with USB 2.0 devices, but, of course, can only run at 12Mb/s maximum. Note that hubs that are only USB 1.1 compatible will only allow 12Mb/s maximum through them.
USB 2.0 is the current standard. It is fully compatible with Low and Full speeds, plus adds 480Mb/s 'Hi-Speed'. Any USB 2.0 compatible controllers (computers,) can run any device that supports any of the three speeds. USB 2.0 devices that are 'Hi-Speed' are also supposed to support Full speed for compatibility (For example, that 52x CD-RW drive should support Full speed, but will drop to 4x speed, when connected to a USB 1.1 controller.)
The official 'branding' of devices is that they should *NOT* specify USB 1.1 vs. USB 2.0. They should only say the speed they operate at. So Low or Full speed devices (mice, keyboards, printers, etc,) should have a 'USB' logo, with no version numbers, just the USB logo. 'Hi-Speed' devices (hard drives, CD-ROM drives, camcorders,) are supposed to use the 'USB Hi-Speed' logo, which, again, does not say 'USB 2.0', only adds 'Hi-Speed' to the normal USB logo. Companies that use "USB 2.0" branding to advertise any device are not complying with the USB group's marketing standards.
But, yes, a USB 2.0-compatible device can very well operate at 2Mb/s, or 'Low' speed. A good example is keyboards with built-in hubs. My old keyboard is only USB 1.1, so I can plug in any device I want, but it will run at 'Full' speed (12Mb/s) maximum. Newer keyboards have USB 2.0-compatible hubs, so even though the keyboard itself is 'Low' speed, you can plug in your external HD, and the hard drive will happily run at 480Mb/s to your host computer. (Obviously, you also need a USB 2.0-compliant host controller in your computer.)
Who wants to buy my Pentium IV*? (Score:2, Insightful)
If they did the same with processors a Pentium would be advertised as a Pentium IV because the Pentium IV is backward compatible with the Pentium but can also go faster.
So a Pentium is now a low-speed Pentium IV; a Pentium II a full-speed Pentium IV and a Pentium IV a high-speed Pentium IV**.
They may qualify under the technical standard as USB2.0 but it clearly is labelled as such to deceive the customers into expecting a faster device.
*the fine print says it's a low-speed one.
**I know it is not a perfe
Hi-speed Pentium (Score:3, Funny)
A lot of people fail to notice the real issue. (Score:5, Interesting)
For example: A device running at 2mb speed that sends 500kb in a second uses a full 1/4 of the entire USB bandwidth. This automatically chops the 12mb down to 9mb, and the 480mb down to 360mb. A 12mb device that sends 6mb cuts it in half.
By the time you have a keyboard, mouse, joystick, mp3 player, external drive, and who knows what else sharing the USB connection, you have a lot of things competing for limited bandwidth with the slower devices taking an inordinate share of the pie. This is one of the reasons I like sticking to the old PS/2 style Mouse and keyboard connectors. Keep these usually slow devices from flooding the connection. Particularily the high-res mice.
And then when you consider the 2mb/12mb/480mb numbers are the absolute maximum theoretical numbers without overhead, you realize that you get nowhere near this kind of throughput in the first place. Things can get bogged down pretty quickly.
Personally, I run two separate USB adapters. The built-in USB on the motherboard and a separate PCI USB controller. I leave all the slow things like keyboard and mouse and joysticks on one controller. I put the things that need speed like a dvd burner or mp3 player on the other one and make sure I don't use them at the same time.
Re:A lot of people fail to notice the real issue. (Score:3, Informative)
The minumom number of controllers I have seen on today's machines is three (two UHCI and one EHCI).
Host controllers are slower than stated too (Score:3, Informative)
Recently I started developing with USB 2.0 assuming that I could get maybe 50MB/sec data through (480Mbps - overhead) the high speed mode of USB 2.0. Note that full speed is lower than high speed in the spec ?!?!?!?
What I found was that on PCI / cardbus plugin cards, this was actually reduced to about 20MB/sec. This is less than half what you seen on product boxes.
The issue is that host controllers are at fault. USB 2.0 contains a number of slots in each frame on the bus that can be filled with data. If I remember correctly, there are 13 available slots for bulk transfers that can take 512 bytes each. Technically, 12 of these shoulb be the theoratical maximum limit to fill. In practice, many controllers only fill 3 giving the poor bandwidth as they cant keep up with the data rate.
The other issue is with the PCI bus. On many computers this is not fast enough to deal with a single device needing high speed bandwidth although in most cases it does not appear to be the bottleneck.
Most add-on USB 2.0 host controller cards contain a chip from one manufacturer (who I choose not to mention). These suffer the worst performance of 18-20 MB/sec. They comply with the Intel EHCI 0.95 spec for host controllers although the manufacturer has offered a new 1.0 compliant chip offering some increases in speed.
The best performance is when USB 2.0 is tapped from Intel North Bridges on the motherboard. 11 of the slots are filled with data and 35MB/sec can be achieved. Its still not the maximum performance though
If you are buying a PC, make sure you insist on built in USB 2.0 or all your devices may run slow. Also make sure you only use the Microsoft drivers on Windows as they offer significant improvements over others. Win XP or Win2K SP4 contain these.
Note that the USB 2.0 and EHCI 1.0 specs do not contain any specification as to the bandwidth a host controller must provide. Some chips may be better or worse than those mentioned above as there is no control on what a manufacturer should provide
If my USB 1.1 is UHCI, then I WANT a usb2 mouse (Score:2, Informative)
If you are cursed with VIA USB 1.1 controlers (UHCI) having slow 2.0 device that will talk to the EHCI par of the controler makes LOTS of sense. The EHCI/OHCI are infinitely smarter and have a much lesser impact on the PCI than UHCI!
So I'd be happy to find a USB 2.0 mouse, if I had a VIA chipset!
Remember when...? (Score:2)
The bottom line is that to claim USB 2.0 compliance, it doesn't actually have to be USB 2.0 compliant. If that makes any sense. My laptop was made USB 2.0 complaint overnight by that change. I didn't even have to install anything! Wheee! Feel the burn?
This is a scam (Score:2)
I only get 1.5 mb/second from it (12 mbps a.k.a 1.1)
This is fraud, scam, ripoff
i've emailed sandisk (Score:2)
My box of my cruzer mini drive says "hi-speed usb 2.0" and displays the logo "hi-speed certified usb 2.0", so i expect 480mbps from it instead of the lousy 12mbps i am getting.
Yes, i have usb 2.0 ports with their drivers installed, and yes, i have used true 2.0 devices at full speed before on them.
Good for 1394 (Score:2)
This kind of nonsense i
An outrage? No, this is real life. (Score:5, Interesting)
Look all around you. Take a very good look. Have a look at that McDonalds' "100% beef" burger that tastes like no other beef on Earth. Watch that WWE wrestling match that's about as honest as a $7 note. Watch that TV expose that shows the truth behind the "honest" business practices of Gap, Nike, etc. Read RIAA's latest claims about P2P costing its members half their sales revenues, and of a 40-speed CD burner equating to 40 actual burners. Pick up a paper and marvel at how many of your fellow citizens still think the attacks on Septemer 11th were carried out by Iraqis, or that WMDs will be found in Iraq any minute now.
The world is full of lies and deception. That isn't about to change. If you're going to stand up and complain about it, you could find a lot of better things to complain about than the possible mis-labelling (deliberate or otherwise) of a USB2 device.
I'm not trying to put you down or anything. I'm just trying to show you that this is a drop in the ocean. And complaining about drops when there are some big, kick-ass tsunamis out there is kind of ridiculous.
Donald Knuth is dead? (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:4, Funny)
Karma is precious.
No, you're wrong. (Score:2, Informative)