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  2. USB 3.0 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_3.0

    The new transfer rate, marketed as SuperSpeed USB (SS), can transfer signals at up to 5 Gbit/s with nominal data rate of 500 MB/s after encoding overhead, which is about 10 times faster than High-Speed (maximum for USB 2.0 standard). USB 3.0 Type-A and B connectors are usually blue, to distinguish them from USB 2.0 connectors, as recommended by ...

  3. USB communications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_communications

    A USB device pulls one of the data lines high with a 1.5 kΩ resistor. This overpowers one of the 15 kΩ pull-down resistors in the host and leaves the data lines in an idle state called J. For USB 1.x, the choice of data line indicates what signal rates the device is capable of: full-bandwidth devices pull D+ high,

  4. List of interface bit rates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_interface_bit_rates

    List of interface bit rates. This is a list of interface bit rates, is a measure of information transfer rates, or digital bandwidth capacity, at which digital interfaces in a computer or network can communicate over various kinds of buses and channels. The distinction can be arbitrary between a computer bus, often closer in space, and larger ...

  5. USB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB

    USB data transfer rates are slower than those of other interconnects such as 100 Gigabit Ethernet. USB has a strict tree network topology and master/slave protocol for addressing peripheral devices; those devices cannot interact with one another except via the host, and two hosts cannot communicate over their USB ports directly.

  6. USB4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB4

    USB4 devices must support a data communication bit rate of 20 gigabits (Gbit/s). Versions of the standard optionally support bit rates of 40 Gbit/s (USB4 version 1.0), 80 Gbit/s (USB4 version 2.0), and 120 Gbit/s. In contrast to prior USB standards, USB4 mandates the exclusive use of the USB-C connector and the USB Power Delivery specification.

  7. USB-C - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C

    It preserves existing USB 3.1 SuperSpeed and SuperSpeed+ data modes and introduces two new SuperSpeed+ transfer modes over the USB-C connector using two-lane operation, doubling the data rates to 10 and 20 Gbit/s (1 and ~2.4 GB/s). USB 3.2 is only supported by USB-C, making micro-USB connectors obsolete. USB4 Specification

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