Banana Man wrote:
I know there is a new version of USB ratified or will soon be available.
Has anyone seen on a laptop or device know of a device available that support USB 3.0
USB 3.0 support speeds like 5.0 Gbit for something crazy like that
Haven't seen anything using it yet, but I do know that it's going to be kickass.
I bought an external drive that had USB2 and eSATA interfaces on it. According to their documentation here are the speeds supported: "The USB 2.0 interface is capable of up to 60MB/sec transfer rates, while the eSATA interface is capable of up to 300MB/sec transfer rates."
USB 3.0 is going to murder that. 60MB/sec is 480Mb/sec, a fraction of the 5Gb/sec you mention.
EDIT: Found a link that shows speeds, you are right. It's going to be kickass.
Here's the link:
URLs rewritten, remove parenthesis (http:)//www.brighthub.com/computing/hardware/articles/24772.aspxUSB 3.0 – Speed and Fixes
USB’s biggest weakness as a external connector is speed; or, more accurately, lack thereof. FireWire 400, while having lower maximum bandwidth than USB 2.0, is usually about 50% faster than USB. The reason is down to USB’s reliance on drivers and CPU processing, while FireWire is peer-to-peer. FireWire 800 doubles bandwidth and moves to full, instead of half, duplex (two way, instead of one way at a time) communication. eSATA buries them all, offering more bandwidth than even a Solid State Drive can use.
USB 3.0 turns things up to 5Gb/s, as opposed USB 2.0’s 480Mbits. It introduces 8b/10b signaling though, which brings the bandwidth available to your data to 400MB/s. Still a lot better than 2.0’s 60MB/s. USB 3.0 also one ups 2.0 with full duplex traffic.
Another technical tweak to be happy about is no more polling, a component of the aforementioned CPU load. Polling also increases power consumption of connected devices. USB 3.0 will also try to reduce power consumption with better control of devices (like automatically turning them off when not in use). While reducing the power used by an idle device is good, having more power available when a device needs it is also a plus.