Speed
Currently, there are 3 speed modes defined by the latest USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 specification. They are Super-Speed, Hi-Speed and Full-
Speed. The new SuperSpeed mode has a transfer rate of 4.8Gbps. While the specification retains Hi-Speed, and Full-Speed USB mode,
commonly known as USB 2.0 and 1.1 respectively, the slower modes still operate at 480Mbps and 12Mbps respectively and are kept to
maintain backward compatibility.
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 achieves the much higher performance by the technical changes below:
•
An additional physical bus that is added in parallel with the existing USB 2.0 bus (refer to the picture below).
•
USB 2.0 previously had four wires (power, ground, and a pair for differential data); USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 adds four more for two pairs
of differential signals (receive and transmit) for a combined total of eight connections in the connectors and cabling.
•
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 utilizes the bidirectional data interface, rather than USB 2.0's half-duplex arrangement. This gives a 10-fold
increase in theoretical bandwidth.
With today's ever increasing demands placed on data transfers with high-definition video content, terabyte storage devices, high megapixel
count digital cameras etc., USB 2.0 may not be fast enough. Furthermore, no USB 2.0 connection could ever come close to the 480Mbps
theoretical maximum throughput, making data transfer at around 320Mbps (40MB/s) — the actual real-world maximum. Similarly, USB
3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 connections will never achieve 4.8Gbps. We will likely see a real-world maximum rate of 400MB/s with overheads. At this
speed, USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 is a 10x improvement over USB 2.0.
Applications
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 opens up the laneways and provides more headroom for devices to deliver a better overall experience. Where USB
video was barely tolerable previously (both from a maximum resolution, latency, and video compression perspective), it's easy to imagine
that with 5-10 times the bandwidth available, USB video solutions should work that much better. Single-link DVI requires almost 2Gbps
throughput. Where 480Mbps was limiting, 5Gbps is more than promising. With its promised 4.8Gbps speed, the standard will find its way
into some products that previously weren't USB territory, like external RAID storage systems.
Listed below are some of the available SuperSpeed USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 products:
•
External Desktop USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 Hard Drives
•
Portable USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 Hard Drives
•
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 Drive Docks & Adapters
•
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 Flash Drives & Readers
•
USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 Solid-state Drives
10
Technology and components
Содержание Vostro 3070
Страница 1: ...Dell Vostro 3070 Service Manual Regulatory Model D19M Regulatory Type D19M005 ...
Страница 16: ...2 Tighten the two 6 32x6 35 screws to secure the cover to the computer 16 Removing and installing components ...
Страница 18: ...c Lift the chassis and remove the front bezel from the chassis 18 Removing and installing components ...
Страница 20: ...2 Rotate the bezel until the tabs clicks into place 20 Removing and installing components ...
Страница 23: ...c Slide and lift the HDD away from the chassis Removing and installing components 23 ...
Страница 29: ...b Unroute the PSU cables from the retention clips Removing and installing components 29 ...
Страница 34: ...3 Route the PSU cables through the retention tabs 34 Removing and installing components ...
Страница 35: ...4 Connect the PSU cables to the connectors on the system board Removing and installing components 35 ...
Страница 43: ...3 Connect the fan cable to the connector on the system board Removing and installing components 43 ...
Страница 53: ...Removing and installing components 53 ...
Страница 55: ...Removing and installing components 55 ...
Страница 57: ...Removing and installing components 57 ...
Страница 59: ...Removing and installing components 59 ...
Страница 60: ...3 Connect the hard drive power supply unit cable to the system board 60 Removing and installing components ...