.Sup wrote:
Freezer7Pro wrote:
.Sup wrote:
So? It will still be faster than 2.0.
Yeah, more speed is always good, but optical technology is expensive, and if this comes with great increases in price, it's not gonna be worth it, seeing how a large majority of current USB devices won't use that bandwidth. It wouldn't surprise me if there were mobos delivered with one or two 3.0 ports, and the rest 2.0.
You say like you're still on USB 1.1. No device supported USB 2.0 when it was released but that soon changed. Now all devices support 2.0 as they will 3.0. Having both USB 2.0 and 3.0 controller would make the mobo more expensive but I won't be surprised if that really happens.
You're pretty much forced to have both gens of controller on board, as backwards compatibility is one of the strong things of USB - it's truly universal. If all 1.1/2.0 devices would stop working, it would be a total flop.
USB 1.1 to 2.0 was an essential jump, increasing the bandwidth of a slow interface by a factor of 40, with near no additional costs. USB 3.0, however, is only increasing the bandwidth 6-10 times, at a cost that could be quite high, as optical technology is a lot more expensive than copper. Plus, USB 2.0 isn't even fully utilized by most pheripherals, and the ones that do need more bandwidth, can often operate on eSATA.
What I'm saying, is that USB 3.0 is something the market isn't ready for. In five years, devices will have started really requiring more bandwidth than 2.0 can offer, which would actually make 3.0 compatibility more than just a sticker.
Last edited by Freezer7Pro (2008-08-19 05:19:56)