Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 17th Nov 2008 19:18 UTC
Hardware, Embedded Systems Unveiled on Monday by the USB Implementers Forum, the USB 3.0 spec can theoretically support data-transfer speeds of up to 4.8Gbps - 10 times the speed provided by USB 2.0. The new standard, also known as SuperSpeed USB, is also expected to be more power-efficient than its predecessor. "SuperSpeed USB is the next advancement in ubiquitous technology," Jeff Ravencraft, the president of the USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF), the industry group that promotes USB technology, said in a statement on Monday. "Today's consumers are using rich media and large digital files that need to be easily and quickly transferred from PCs to devices and vice versa. SuperSpeed USB meets the needs of everyone, from the tech-savvy executive to the average home user."
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Late 2009?
by Thomas2005 on Tue 18th Nov 2008 21:32 UTC
Thomas2005
Member since:
2005-11-07

The USB-IF hopes USB 3.0 will be built into computers from late 2009, with consumer products using the specification starting to appear the following year

I would think computer manufacturers would start to put them in within 6 months of the specifications being certified. Is there something about its implementation at the hardware level that is particularly difficult or is the OS the "bottleneck"?