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  2. USB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB

    The throughput of each USB port is determined by the slower speed of either the USB port or the USB device connected to the port. High-speed USB 2.0 hubs contain devices called transaction translators that convert between high-speed USB 2.0 buses and full and low speed buses. There may be one translator per hub or per port.

  3. USB hardware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_hardware

    The USB-C plug USB cable with a USB-C plug and a USB-C port on a notebook computer. The USB-C connector supersedes all earlier USB connectors and the Mini DisplayPort connector. It is used for all USB protocols and for Thunderbolt (3 and later), DisplayPort (1.2 and later), and others.

  4. USB communications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_communications

    USB ports and cables are used to connect hardware such as printers, scanners, keyboards, mice, flash drives, external hard drives, joysticks, cameras, monitors, and more to computers of all kinds. USB also supports signaling rates from 1.5 Mbit/s (Low speed) to 80 Gbit/s (USB4 2.0) depending on the version of the standard. The article explains ...

  5. USB hub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_hub

    A four-port "long cable" "external box" USB hub A four-port "compact design" USB hub: upstream and downstream ports shown. A USB hub is a device that expands a single Universal Serial Bus (USB) port into several so that there are more ports available to connect devices to a host system, similar to a power strip. All devices connected through a ...

  6. Computer port (hardware) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_port_(hardware)

    Almost all ports on personal computers are hot-swappable. Plug-and-play ports are designed so that the connected devices automatically start handshaking as soon as the hot-swapping is done. USB ports and FireWire ports are plug-and-play. Auto-detect or auto-detection ports are usually plug-and-play, but they offer another type of convenience.

  7. USB4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB4

    USB4 Gen3x2 cable (40 Gbps) with 100 W Power Delivery. Universal Serial Bus 4 (USB4), sometimes erroneously referred to as USB 4.0, is the most recent technical specification of the USB (Universal Serial Bus) data communication standard.

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