A USB-C cable can be limited to either USB 3.1, 3.0, or 2.0 speeds. Some USB-C cables are USB 3.1 Gen 2 cables. This means they can transfer an HD movie in about five seconds, around 10 gigabits ...
Cable management is a hassle that we all live with daily. If you aren’t scrambling to find the USB-A or USB-C cable plugged into the car dashboard, you’re untangling the wired mess at your ...
Raspberry Pi has once again expanded its list of official Raspberry Pi branded accessories, releasing an official USB 3 Hub ...
Your pile of USB cables might include some USB 2 cords, some that only support power, and maybe even Thunderbolt cables. Its ...
My USB-C may not be the same as yours. And the USB-C you bought two years ago may not be the same as the one you got today.
We’ve now had at least five years of USB-C ports in our devices. It’s a standard that many manufacturers and hackers can get behind. Initially, there was plenty of confusion about what we’d ...
By default, a USB-C cable plugged into a USB 3.1 port can transfer 10 gigabytes of data per second. Plugging into a 3.2 port will get you 20 gigabytes per second. And Thunderbolt 3 ports allow USB ...
making it a convenient single-cable solution for laptops and tablets. With USB 3.2, you’ll have a USB-A or possibly the newer USB-C connector. USB 3.2 is commonly connected to high-speed storage ...
Okay, listen. Maybe I'm in the minority here; I still use and like USB-A. I know the EU wants to drag me kicking and screaming into a glorious utopian future where every device is powered and ...