ReviewIt’s true: USB 3.0 SuperSpeed will be 10 times faster than the 480Mbps limit of the 2.0 spec. The example Intel likes to give out when talking about the new speed is that transferring a 27GB HD movie to your future media player will only take 70 seconds with USB 3.0, while it would take 15 minutes or more with 2.0. Keep in mind that you’re only going to be able to take advantage of this speed if your portable storage device can write data that quickly. Solid state devices will benefit most from the speed boost, while magnetic hard disks will be limited by their RPM and corresponding read/write speeds. Also, new Mass Storage Device drivers will have to be developed for Windows to take advantage of the spec.
Cool, +1 for the info, no more waiting for films to transfer onto the external HDD
Current storage devices barely use all the USB 2.0 bandwidth. This is a tad overhyped. Nice pics, though.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
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..Sup wrote:
So? It will still be faster than 2.0.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Current storage devices barely use all the USB 2.0 bandwidth. This is a tad overhyped. Nice pics, though.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
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.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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..Sup wrote:
So? It will still be faster than 2.0.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Current storage devices barely use all the USB 2.0 bandwidth. This is a tad overhyped. Nice pics, though.
That sounds about right actually, I think USB 3.0 will come into play very slowlyFreezer7Pro wrote:
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..Sup wrote:
So? It will still be faster than 2.0.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Current storage devices barely use all the USB 2.0 bandwidth. This is a tad overhyped. Nice pics, though.
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..Sup wrote:
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.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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..Sup wrote:
So? It will still be faster than 2.0.
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)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Apart from external storage devices (which it'll be a huge improvement for) I can't see this being of much widespread use, nothing else on USB really even makes use of the full speed of USB 2.0.
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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..Sup wrote:
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.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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.
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.
Releasing a hardware spec that is above and beyond what the actual hardware can do is nothing new..Sup wrote:
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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.
Yes and the technology must go on whether we are ready or not.Defiance wrote:
Releasing a hardware spec that is above and beyond what the actual hardware can do is nothing new..Sup wrote:
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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.
Technology advances ftw
The thing is, that there is no market for USB 3.0, and risks of it bringing higher prices to USB units being quite high. It can't be compared to PCI-E, as that's only used for around 5% of the market, that consists of high-performance hardware. USB is in 95% instead, and many people aren't gonna wanna pay extra to get a standard that's so far above the needs right now. In five years, yes, but not now..Sup wrote:
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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..Sup wrote:
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.
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.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Thank fucking god it's keyed. USB 2.0 form factor is balls.
Pushing USB 3.0 does not mean that manufacturers have to use it. Same goes for end users. Low price categories will go out the window just because of a new hardware spec.Freezer7Pro wrote:
The thing is, that there is no market for USB 3.0, and risks of it bringing higher prices to USB units being quite high. It can't be compared to PCI-E, as that's only used for around 5% of the market, that consists of high-performance hardware. USB is in 95% instead, and many people aren't gonna wanna pay extra to get a standard that's so far above the needs right now. In five years, yes, but not now.
/sticks it in. doesnt fit...wtfFlaming_Maniac wrote:
Thank fucking god it's keyed. USB 2.0 form factor is balls.
/flips it over....doesnt fit...what the hell.
/one more flip, how the fuck did that go in?
Seems to me you would like to stick with USB 2.0 forever?Freezer7Pro wrote:
The thing is, that there is no market for USB 3.0, and risks of it bringing higher prices to USB units being quite high. It can't be compared to PCI-E, as that's only used for around 5% of the market, that consists of high-performance hardware. USB is in 95% instead, and many people aren't gonna wanna pay extra to get a standard that's so far above the needs right now. In five years, yes, but not now..Sup wrote:
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.Freezer7Pro wrote:
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.
Seeing as its backwards compatible, I see no problem. Cheap devices that don't use the 2.0 bandwidth fully can continue using that protocol, just like there is still loads of 1.1 hardware out there.
once upon a midnight dreary, while i pron surfed, weak and weary, over many a strange and spurious site of ' hot xxx galore'. While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning, and my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour, " 'Tis not possible!", i muttered, " give me back my free hardcore!"..... quoth the server, 404.
I want to not be forced to buy USB 3.0 until there is technology that actually uses it. I don't wanna pay an extra 20€ for USB 3.0 until then..Sup wrote:
Seems to me you would like to stick with USB 2.0 forever?Freezer7Pro wrote:
The thing is, that there is no market for USB 3.0, and risks of it bringing higher prices to USB units being quite high. It can't be compared to PCI-E, as that's only used for around 5% of the market, that consists of high-performance hardware. USB is in 95% instead, and many people aren't gonna wanna pay extra to get a standard that's so far above the needs right now. In five years, yes, but not now..Sup wrote:
PCI-E 3.0 will be out soon. And 2.0 isn't used to its full potential yet. Should they stop developing it? Technology goes forward whether we are ready for it or not and it should.
I'm only writing this, assuming that the uptical interface of USB 3.0 will bring extra costs. If it's at the same price as 2.0, of course it should be integrated.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
You wont be forced, I'm sure there will be mobos with USB 2.0 only. If I think like you I wouldn't be having the mobo I am having now. It came with a nice soundcard which probably cost me 30€. And its not even a technological advance.Freezer7Pro wrote:
I want to not be forced to buy USB 3.0 until there is technology that actually uses it. I don't wanna pay an extra 20€ for USB 3.0 until then..Sup wrote:
Seems to me you would like to stick with USB 2.0 forever?Freezer7Pro wrote:
The thing is, that there is no market for USB 3.0, and risks of it bringing higher prices to USB units being quite high. It can't be compared to PCI-E, as that's only used for around 5% of the market, that consists of high-performance hardware. USB is in 95% instead, and many people aren't gonna wanna pay extra to get a standard that's so far above the needs right now. In five years, yes, but not now.
I'm only writing this, assuming that the uptical interface of USB 3.0 will bring extra costs. If it's at the same price as 2.0, of course it should be integrated.
nice thats fast ! hopefully it comes out soon
It's Finished.
Last edited by Gooners (2008-11-26 14:33:34)