• NotAnOnionAtAll@feddit.org
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    9 days ago

    TL;DR: The USB Implementers Forum is ridiculously bad at naming, symbols and communication in general. (And they don’t seriously enforce any of this anyway, so don’t even bother learning it.)

    • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      This is the correct answer; after the whole USB 3.2 Gen 2 2x2 (hands of blue) bullshit, I wouldn’t trust that team to name a park bench in the middle of the desert. Let alone something important and universally used.

      • T156@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        It basically gets longer every few years. At this rate, it’ll turn into an Amazon listing.

        USB 3.5 Gen 3 2x2 20 Gbit Two-Sided DP PD USB 3 USB 2 USB 1 Compatible

      • quant@leminal.space
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        9 days ago

        We could have gone for already proven and tested conventions like the resistor color codes and have a unique distinguishable icon for each features to attach when needed (like thunder icon for high power). But nope, we got this USB 3.2 Gen 4 2x2 Hyper Turbocharged World Champions and Knuckles Platinum Edition bs instead.

      • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 days ago

        The bench is called “Bench” (legacy name, it’s actually more like a concrete slab, but at the time it was more benchy that the previous bench which was just a pile of sand).

      • s_s@lemm.ee
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        8 days ago

        the whole USB 3.2 Gen 2 2x2 (hands of blue) bullshit

        If you’re not trying to wire your own USB port you can just use the recommended names “USB SuperSpeed 20 Gbps” or “USB 20 Gbps”. You don’t have to be confused by technical names if you don’t want to be.

        The real bullshit is between your ears–you and only you can fix it.

    • s_s@lemm.ee
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      9 days ago

      They are not bad at this. You are bad at understanding it.

      Don’t get mad when you could instead learn something.

      Yes it gets complex. It’s a 25-year old protocol that does almost everything. Of course it will be.

      But the names are not hard if you bother to learn them.

      • NotAnOnionAtAll@feddit.org
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        8 days ago

        They are not bad at this. You are bad at understanding it.

        I work with this stuff, and I do understand it. Some of my colleagues are actively participating in USB-IF workgroups, although not the ones responsible for naming end user facing things. They come to me for advice when those other workgroups changed some names retroactively again and we need to make sure we are still backwards compatible with things that rely on those names and that we are not confusing our customers more than necessary.

        That is why I am very confident in claiming those naming schemes are bad.

        “don’t even bother learning it” is my advice for normal end users, and I do stand by it.

        But the names are not hard if you bother to learn them.

        Never said it is hard.

        It is more complex than it needs to be.

        It is internally inconsistent.

        Names get changed retroactively with new spec releases.

        None of that is hard to learn, just not worth the effort.

        • InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
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          8 days ago

          They’re bad because manufacturers want to pass their usb 2.0 gear as “usb 3.0 compliant”, which it technically is, and their usb 3.0 gear as “usb 3.2” because 3.2 Gen 1x1 is also 5gbps.

          Also the whole alternate mode is awesome, but cheap hub chips don’t bother trying to support it and the only people who do are the laptop ports so they can save $.40 on a separate hdmi port.

          And don’t get me started on all the USB-c chargers that only put out 1.5a because it’s just a normal 7805 on the back end.

          • s_s@lemm.ee
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            8 days ago

            They’re bad because manufacturers want to pass their usb 2.0 gear as “usb 3.0 compliant”, which it technically is, and their usb 3.0 gear as “usb 3.2” because 3.2 Gen 1x1 is also 5gbps.

            The USB X.X is just the version of the standard and doesn’t mean anything for the capabilities of a physical device.

            When a new standard comes out it superceeds the old one. Devices are always designed and certified according to the current standard.

            Soooo…What are you talking about?

            • InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
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              8 days ago

              I’m talking about using the standard traditionally to denote the performance of the connection.

              You don’t go around talking about your “Usb 3.0 device” that runs at 480mbps unless you’re trying to be a massive dickhole.

              That’s what I’m talking about.

              • s_s@lemm.ee
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                8 days ago

                480mbps

                A device or port that does 480mbps transfer speeds is a “Hi-Speed” device/port. That’s the real name and always has been.

                It doesn’t matter what version of the USB spec it was certified under. If it was designed between 2000 and 2008 it was certified under USB 2.0 or 2.1

                If that device was certified between 2008 and 2013 then it was certified under USB 3.0. That absolutely doesn’t make it a “SuperSpeed” device/port, but that’s more than clear when we use the real names.

                • InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
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                  8 days ago

                  Nobody uses that, they use the spec number because that’s what they’ve been taught, and they identify with it more than the incredibly stupid ‘full/high/super/duper/ultramegahyperspeed’ convention which the idiots at the siig decided to break again in 3.2.

                  Everybody literally on the planet agrees the system is moronic, you’re literally the only person who dissents, congratulations on that.

        • s_s@lemm.ee
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          8 days ago

          They come to me for advice when those other workgroups changed some names retroactively again

          Can you give a specific example of this?

          I’d love to believe all your ethos arguments if you could give me some logos.

      • rhandyrhoads@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        There is some stuff to be learned, but especially with USB-C I’d say the vast majority are not labeled. There’s even some devices charged with USB C that can’t be charged with a PD charger and need an A to C cable. Phones are a great example where you have to look up the specs to know data transfer capabilities. Additionally they renamed the USB 3.0 standard which has been established for over a decade to USB 3.1 Gen 1 which is completely unnecessary and just serves to confuse. The standard was largely understandable with USB 3.0 generally being blue or at least a color other than black and on decently modern devices USB 2.0 would be black. With USB-C indication has just about gone out the window and what used to be a very simple to understand standard has now become nearly impossible to understand without having researched every device and cable you interact with.

        • s_s@lemm.ee
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          8 days ago

          There’s even some devices charged with USB C that can’t be charged with a PD charger and need an A to C cable

          Phones with qualcomm chips briefly had their own proprietary fast charging standards that were not a USB standard. You are unlikely to be using those devices in 2024. But is it USB-IF’s fault manufacturers tried to create proprietary standards to collect royalties?

          Additionally they renamed the USB 3.0 standard which has been established for over a decade to USB 3.1 Gen 1 which is completely unnecessary and just serves to confuse

          No they didn’t?

          The 5Gbps transfer rate introduced in 2008 is called “Superspeed” and it always has been.

          USB X.X is not a port or a transfer speed. It’s the standard (ie a technical whitepaper). The standard is updated as time marches on and new features are added.

          The standard was largely understandable with USB 3.0 generally being blue or at least a color other than black and on decently modern devices USB 2.0 would be black.

          This was never a requirement, but it was nice to know which Type-A ports had 8 pins vs 4-pins.

          With USB-C indication has just about gone out the window and what used to be a very simple to understand standard has now become nearly impossible to understand without having researched every device and cable you interact with.

          For the most part you just plug it in and it works. If you need something specific like an external GPU connection, you can’t use your phone charging cable, sure. Is that really that big of a deal?

          • NotAnOnionAtAll@feddit.org
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            8 days ago

            But is it USB-IF’s fault manufacturers tried […]

            Yes, it absolutely is USB-IF’s fault that they are not even trying to enforce some semblance of consistency and sanity among adopters. They do have the power to say “no soup certification for you” to manufacturers not following the rules, but they don’t use it anywhere near aggressively enough. And that includes not making rules that are strict enough in the first place.

  • tobogganablaze@lemmus.org
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    10 days ago

    You won’t find these symbols on most devices though (certainly not on any macbook as the picture suggests).

    • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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      10 days ago

      By removing the symbols they were able to shave the case down 0.0003nm, making it the thinnest and lightest laptop ever.

    • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      I didn’t take the image to be showing a macbook, it could just as easily be my computer or probably many others.

      • doctortran@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        It could be, but combine the color looking very much like Apple’s space grey, the slimness of it, particularly how slim the lid is versus the body, and what looks like the MacBook’s classic black, rounded rubber stoppers on the bottom, I think it’s safe to say that’s meant to be an MacBook.

        Also certain MacBook models tried to go to a single USB C port about a decade ago, and it was on the corner like that.

    • Magister@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      True, my latest Dell laptop has 3 “usb-c shaped ports”, there is 0 symbol anywhere close to them or the underside cover, you’re on your own as to what it supports, you have to find the doc online somewhere I guess.

      • subtext@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Tbf my work Dell Latitude 5440 has a USB A with a SS5, an A with a SS5 and charging indicator, a C with a thunderbolt indicator, and a C with a battery and a thunderbolt indicator.

        So at least some of their laptops do in fact have the indicators similar-ish enough to what the infographic shows.

        • Magister@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          my 5680 has absolutely nothing. Checking online I found that the right one is a usb-c 3.2 and the 2 left ones are TB4. IIRC they all support DisplayPort and all support being used as the power input (165W charger), not sure for PD and fast charging a cell/tablet…

        • chiisana@lemmy.chiisana.net
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          9 days ago

          You’re going to find that the appetite for un-targeted advertising to be much lower than that of targeted. The ROI for un-targeted blast is much lower than a smaller more focused targeted campaign.

          As such, you’ll either see even more ads on the same content (in order to obtain similar level of revenue for the publisher), or, as the other user suggested, free ad supported service be a thing of the past.

          Neither of which are good for the mass audience. People already aren’t willing to pay $1 to remove ads on most free ad supported apps, you’re going to find small businesses collapse left right and centre as result of the change.

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            Nothing worth feeling bad for will collapse.

            People are not willing to get ads into every orifice, just nobody’s asking them. Ad blockers are reactive.

            Bigger businesses will feel more pain, I can promise you that. Smaller businesses do not benefit from this ecosystem, quite the opposite - it heats up those who pay more for advertising, or those who are partners with those doing advertising.

            As of payments again - when you are getting ads into your face with a message that you can pay to use something without them, you naturally feel against it.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        9 days ago

        I discovered that my Thinkpad apparently supports charging from all of the (unlabeled) USB-C ports after I inadvertently started it charging from my cell phone’s (unlabeled) USB-C port.

        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          I can do you one better: My GPD laptop has a charging indicator on the center type-C port indicating that this is where the power supply goes, but it can actually be charged from either port regardless of the icon. Both ports are USB 3.0 or 3.2 or whatever the current fast standard is this week, but only the center one supports video out via an external GPU enclosure. So if you want to use it docked with an eGPU, it’s actually required to not plug the power supply into the port that says you should plug the power supply into it.

          So not only is the marking meaningless, it’s arguably worse than meaningless because in one of the headline hardware setups for the machine it is actually 100% incorrect to do what the marking is telling you to do. Wrap your head around that one…

  • Matombo@feddit.org
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    9 days ago

    exept when manufacturer don’t give a fuck and print whatever or nothing next to the port. like always

  • Overshoot2648@lemm.ee
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    8 days ago

    I legit have never seen the battery used at all. They often use a plug, a lightning bolt confusingly, or don’t even label it at all.

  • Qutorial@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    All they had to do was require stamped icons on the ends of the plugs in the spec, and instead we have the current cable mystery clusterfuck 🤦

  • s_s@lemm.ee
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    9 days ago

    SuperSpeed is not a “legacy” name.

    It’s the name of a transfer rate.

    I do not trust the maker of this infographic if they cannot understand some basic facts.

  • FierySpectre@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    It gets even better, each function of the port also needs proper support from the cable. Often cables do not support the full spec of usb to cut costs.

    While the symbols in the post are often put on computers, for usb cables this is seldom done (only a few brands do).

    Source: had to find a cable that supports both DP and PD to connect a portable external monitor after I lost the original cable. (1/9 cables worked)

    • xep@fedia.io
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      10 days ago

      Yes, this is incredibly annoying and it’s also the reason why some USB cables cost more than others, even they may look the same superficially.

      • FierySpectre@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        One of those cables that don’t work is rated for like 120W, with gigabit transfer speed… But it refuses to transmit display… Like bruh

          • FierySpectre@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            Didn’t really think about that one but you’re right damn… (Looked it up, and it depends on the bit depth etc, but it’s around 3.2Gbps for the display settings if I’m correct)… So that explains a lot

            Gigabit is capable of like 720p@30Hz which it probably should be able to fall back on, but I understand why they wouldn’t do that haha. 1080p@15Hz is also possible :)

        • tobogganablaze@lemmus.org
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          10 days ago

          That sounds like a dedicated charging cable. So yeah, they will (if at all) only transfer data slowly and not support any extras features like displayport.

            • tobogganablaze@lemmus.org
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              10 days ago

              No USB cable has “gigabit speed”. It probably has 480 Mbps (USB 2.0 standard).

              Maybe he meant a 5 Gbps Gen1 cable. That would be “gigabit speed” but still rather slow by today’s standards and won’t support DP. They are pretty cheap these days, so wouldn’t be suprising to see left over stocks being sold as charging cables.

              • tal@lemmy.today
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                9 days ago

                No USB cable has “gigabit speed”. It probably has 480 Mbps (USB 2.0 standard).

                What? I’m either misunderstanding you or this statement isn’t correct. Having USB cables that can move data at gigabit rates has been common for quite some years.

                Here’s the latest stuff:

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB4

                Bitrate

                20 Gbit/s
                40 Gbit/s
                80 Gbit/s
                120/40 Gbit/s asymmetric

    • forrcaho@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Yeah, it’s gotten so bad I eventually ordered a USB cable checker to figure out what any given USB cable is capable of (and to see if the cable has gone flaky, which seems to happen a lot). I haven’t received it yet so I don’t know if I can recommend this item, but … gosh darn you sure need something like this.

    • zarenki@lemmy.ml
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      10 days ago

      For that portable monitor, you should just need a cable with USB-C plugs on both ends which supports USB 3.0+ (could be branded as SuperSpeed, 5Gbps, etc). Nothing more complicated than that.

      The baseline for a cable with USB-C on both ends should be PD up to 60W (3A) and data transfers at USB 2.0 (480Mbps) speeds.

      Most cables stick with that baseline because it’s enough to charge phones and most people won’t use USB-C cables for anything else. Omitting the extra capabilities lets cables be not only cheaper but also longer and thinner.

      DisplayPort support uses the same extra data pins that are needed for USB 3.0 data transfers, so in terms of cable support they should be equivalent. There also exist higher-power cables rated for 100W or 240W but there’s no way a portable monitor would need that.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    A small correction on USB PD…

    It’s not just USB PD that supports power delivery: Standard USB from way back in 1.0 also supports power delivery to devices as standard, but it’s only up to 100mA in USB 1.0, 500mA in USB 2.0 and 900mA in USB 3.0, all at 5V.

    USB PD is a dedicated power delivery USB protocol that supports much higher currents (up to 5A) as well as dynamically configured voltages (so, not fixed as 5V anymore) though it’s all negotiated so your 5V-only phones isn’t going to just get burned with 20V from a USB PD charger.

    Since Power = Current * Voltage USB PD can put out quite a lot of power for supporting devices (the maximum depending on what both sides support), which means much faster transmission of power via USB which for example means faster charging of chargeable devices via USB with USB PD.

    Anyways, the point being that even really old USB 1.0 can charge your device (just really really slow, though you’ll be hard pressed to find anything that doesn’t support at least USB 2.0 which can send 5x the current of 1.0 hence charge 5x faster than it), and that standard charging speed goes up with each new Standard USB generation since each has a higher maximum current than the previous one, so for example a standard USB 3.1 charger without USB PD support can still push a nice amount of power down the line to charge devices. It’s just that with USB PD things really take off (though only up to a shared maximum that both sides support) and it can push enough power to support larger devices such as full-blown monitors or even charging notebooks.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      9 days ago

      Last I looked, these (and the “blue plastic for USB 3” convention) weren’t mandated by the spec. So it’s not that they’re violating the spec, but that they’re optional.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        And that’s the real issue with the USB spec, almost everything is optional. This would be fine if cables were largely interchangeable, but they’re not.

        What they should have are a handful of very well-defined tiers. Cables should maybe have three (basic, mid-range, high end), and ports can have a couple more.

        • GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          The problem is that there are too many separate dimensions to define the tiers.

          In terms of data signaling speed and latency, you have the basic generations of USB 1.x, 2.0, 3.x, and 4, with Thunderbolt 3 essentially being the same thing as USB4, and Thunderbolt 4 adding on some more minimum requirements.

          On top of that, you have USB-PD, which is its own standard for power delivery, including how the devices conduct handshakes over a certified cable.

          And then you have the standards for not just raw data speed, but also what other modes are supported, for information to be seamlessly tunneled through the cable and connection in a mode that carries signals other than the data signal spec for USB. Most famously, there’s the DisplayPort Alt Mode for driving display data over a USB-C connection with a DP-compatible monitor. But there’s also an analog audio mode so that the cable and port passes along analog data to or from microphones or speakers.

          Each type of cable, too, carries different physical requirements, which also causes a challenge on how long the cable can be and still work properly. That’s why a lot of the cables that support the latest and greatest data and power standards tend to be short. A longer cable might be useful, but could come at the sacrifice of not supporting certain types of functions. I personally have a long cable that supports USB-PD but can’t carry thunderbolt data speeds or certain types of signals, but I like it because it’s good for plugging in a charger when I’m not that close to an outlet. But I also know it’s not a good cable for connecting my external SSD, which would be bottlenecked at USB 2.0 speeds.

          So the tiers themselves aren’t going to be well defined.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            9 days ago

            Right, which is why it’s so important to define tiers.

            For example:

            1. basic support (cheap) - gen 2 speeds, charging at 5v 500ma, etc; for peripherals and whatnot
            2. high speed (fast enough) - 5gbps speeds, charging at 5v 500ma, etc; USB drives, regular laptop/desktop ports, etc
            3. fast charging (general purpose) - 5gbps data transfer, fast charging up to 45W (or maybe a little lower) at various voltages; phones, special laptop/desktop ports
            4. specialized PD - gen 2 speeds (faster is optional), fast charging up to 240W at various voltages
            5. specialized data - 40gbps data transfer, charging at 5v 500ma (faster is optional), display out

            You’d use the same cable for 1-3, and specialized cables for 4 and 5, and those cables would have special markings on the connector. Ports for 3-5 would have unique markings as well. Cables and ports can go beyond those specs if they want.

            Just because you can break things into separate groups doesn’t mean you should. The goal here shouldn’t be to make things easier for manufacturers, but to make things easier for users.

          • tal@lemmy.today
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            9 days ago

            And then you have the standards for not just raw data speed, but also what other modes are supported, for information to be seamlessly tunneled through the cable and connection in a mode that carries signals other than the data signal spec for USB.

            Not to mention power-only cables to avoid the security issues associated with cables that permit data transfer.

            • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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              9 days ago

              “Power-only” meaning no data BEYOND the PD devices themselves because its actually a data protocol to negotiate the power output to the device.

        • s_s@lemm.ee
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          9 days ago

          It has to be optional to remain a “Universal” spec.

          If it had more requirements, it would be more cumbersome to implement and device manufacturers would come up with completely different, completely incompatible cables and ports (a la Apple’s lightning) that would cause you even more headaches.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            9 days ago

            “Universal” merely means devices with different capabilities can use the same interface. So you can use mice and keyboards (very low bandwidth needs) on the same port as a data hungry drive. That was the major innovation when USB took over for PS/2, parallel port, etc.

            Manufacturers can still use low-end components on the client devices, the requirement would merely be that the ports in host devices and cables would meet some minimum specs to be able to meet USB certification. Instead of having a wide variety of possible configurations, force host devices into smaller niches so the marketing is clearer to customers. Devices would still negotiate voltages, data rates, etc as they do now, the only change would be forcing implementations into buckets.

  • x4740N@lemm.ee
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    9 days ago

    Most devices don’t have theese symbols and basically say fuck you unless you know how to find the specs

  • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 days ago

    What is the difference between USA and USB?

    One connects to all your devices and accesses your data, the other is a hardware standard.

  • Rainer Burkhardt@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Thank God there’s a standard for USB. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one. And another one…

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    9 days ago

    Also don’t forget the dubious AliExpress devices that have all these symbols, no data lines, Vcc at 12V and ground attached to a loose M8 nut.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      9 days ago

      I guess they could have a USB certification body, kinda like UL is for wall power devices, and require that a device have an certification ID number on it that you could look up in their online database to qualify. I mean, you could forge a fake number that doesn’t map to anything, but I feel like that’s a higher bar than just throwing a USB symbol on there. Like, you gotta know that you’re doing something fraudulent in that case.

      investigates

      Huh.

      Apparently UL does certify USB devices. I have no idea how to tell whether a UL-marked device of a given age is certified to do what from the logo alone, though. I guess you could look it up with UL.

      https://www.ul.com/services/ul-taiwan-usb-test-lab

      I bet that only my high-power USB chargers have it, though. Honestly, I didn’t even know that they covered USB, wouldn’t have looked for a UL mark on USB devices.

      investigates

      Well, my Logitech F710 gamepad does have a UL mark. That’s some proprietary wireless protocol, uses AA batteries. Not USB and doesn’t plug into the wall. Dunno whether they certified it for wireless or power safety or whatever.

      looks further

      I have a wired USB gamepad with a bunch of Chinese characters, the URL “www.izdtech.com”, no USB labels, and no UL mark.

      I have a wired/wireless USB 8Bitdo gamepad with a CE mark, USB symbols, and no UL mark (I understand that CE doesn’t work like UL. It doesn’t indicate that any independent organization has tested the device, just is a concise way to state that the device manufacturer states that the device conforms to some set of standards).

      I have a 100W USB PD “Nekteck” charger with a UL mark and some ID number that looks to be associated with that, no CE mark, an FCC mark that I assume is related to RF interference compliance, an enormous USB standard mark with the 100 watt capability listed, and some sort of mark with a box inside another box that I don’t recognize.

      I have an SIIG USB audio interface that has no USB labels, a CE mark, an FCC mark, and no UL mark.

      I have a USB-powered audio mixer that has no USB labels, no FCC mark, no UL mark and a CE mark.

      I have a laptop USB charger that has no USB labels, a CE mark, multiple UL marks, one of which appears to be in some sort of teardrop-looking thing, some “UK CA” mark that I assume is some kind of UK regulatory body. It’s got that same mysterious “box in a box” mark that I saw before, “VI” in a circle, a picture of a house, some “NYCE” mark, and a “NOM” mark.

      I bet that most people have basically no idea what any of this means. I probably know what more of it means than the average person, but definitely not enough to extract a whole lot of information from this. And all of these have a different set of marks; there is no least-common-denominator mark.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        We’re not calling it that anymore. It’s been rebranded to “SuperDuper Speed USB ]|[” now. Note that this is a different standard than the previous “SuperDuper Speed USB 3,” and under no circumstances should you call it “SuperDuper Speed USB 3.0,” because there was never any such spec and pedantic nerds will climb up your nose in the comments if you ever utter it.

    • s_s@lemm.ee
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      9 days ago

      I mean, they update the standard to add new things. Is that bad?

        • s_s@lemm.ee
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          8 days ago

          The don’t.

          But give me an example of what you’re talking about. I’ll explain.

            • s_s@lemm.ee
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              7 days ago

              The consumer facing names for those transmission specs are and have always been:

              • SuperSpeed 10 Gbps

              • SuperSpeed 20 Gbps

              Unless you’re designing your own circuits you don’t need to worry about signaling rates (ie “Gen”) or lane configuration (Z×Y).