3.1 - Peripheral Cables Flashcards
1
Q
USB (Universal Serial Bus)
A
- Simplify connections - Printers, storage devices,
keyboard, mouse - USB 1.1
– Low speed: 1.5 megabits per second, 3 meters
– Full speed: 12 megabits per second, 5 meters - USB 2.0 - 480 megabits per second, 5 meters
- USB 3.0 - SuperSpeed
– 5 gigabits per second, ~3 meters
– Standard does not specify a cable length
2
Q
USB-C
A
- USB has a lot of different connectors
– And they have changed over time - Can be annoying to connect USB-A
– Third time’s the charm - USB-C replaces all of these
– One connector to rule them all - USB-C describes the physical connector
– It doesn’t describe the signal
3
Q
Various USB connector images
A
4
Q
USB versions and naming
A
- There’s a lot to keep track of
– The names keep changing - The standard doesn’t change
– Just the names
5
Q
USB 3.1
A
- Released July 2013
– Doubled the throughput over USB 3.0 - USB 3.0 is USB 3.1 Gen 1
– SuperSpeed USB - 5 Gbit/sec - USB 3.1 is USB 3.1 Gen 2 - SuperSpeed+
– Twice the rate of USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1
6
Q
USB 3.2
A
- USB 3.2
– Released September 2017
– Bandwidth can double with USB-C cables
– Uses an extra “lane” of communication
associated with the flip-flop wires in USB-C - USB 3.0 -> 3.1 Gen 1 -> USB 3.2 Gen 1
– SuperSpeed USB 5 Gbps (single lane) - USB 3.1 -> 3.1 Gen 2 -> USB 3.2 Gen 2
– SuperSpeed USB 10 Gbps (single lane)
7
Q
Thunderbolt
A
- High-speed serial connector
– Data and power on the same cable
– Based on Mini DisplayPort (MDP) standard - Thunderbolt v1
– Two channels
– 10 Gbit/s per channel, 20 Gbit/s total throughput
– Mini DisplayPort connector - Thunderbolt v2
– 20 Gbit/s aggregated channels
– Mini DisplayPort connector - Thunderbolt v3
– 40 Gbit/s aggregated throughput - USB-C connector - Maximum 3 meters (copper)
– 60 meters (optical)
– Daisy-chain up to 6 devices
8
Q
Serial console cables
A
- D-subminiature or D-sub
– The letter refers to the connector size - Commonly used for RS-232
– Recommended Standard 232
– An industry standard since 1969 - Serial communications standard
– Built for modem communication
– Used for modems, printers, mice, networking - Now used as a configuration port