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Thunderbolt vs. SuperSpeed USB

Lucas123 writes "When it comes to performance, power and size, external I/O interconnect Thunderbolt handily beats SuperSpeed USB, but in the one critical category — ubiquity — it has an almost impossible uphill battle. Thunderbolt has a maximum 10Gbps signaling rate to SuperSpeed USB's 6Gbps and it offers more than twice the power to devices. To date, however, Apple is the only systems manufacturer to adopt Thunderbolt, and it has done so as an additional device connectivity port, keeping SuperSpeed USB on its computers. No other systems manufacturer has committed to Thunderbolt. In contrast, SuperSpeed USB has been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware, with numbers continuing to grow."

327 comments

  1. TFA (-1, wrong) by plover · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SuperSpeed USB has been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware

    No it hasn't. USB may have been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware, but SuperSpeed USB is nowhere near as ubiquitous yet. SuperSpeed USB may be able to compatibly downgrade to full-speed USB communication, but that doesn't mean that anything you plug a SuperSpeed device into is magically SuperSpeed.

    Anyway, I like the idea of Thunderbolt, especially the thought that it could become the holy grail of single cable interconnects. But just because I like a thing and it's technically better doesn't mean the world will adopt it. Unfortunately, I've learned that politics and money will drive the decision, not technology.

    --
    John
    1. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Additionally, Sony also has started releasing laptops with athunderbolt, even though with their own connector based off of the USB plug.

      The article is simply wrong.

    2. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "USB may have been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware"

      That sounds like an awfully high number, even for normal USB... Maybe they meant that SuperSpeed USB has been installed in 10 million devices?

    3. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Probably not, because I think even that might be a stretch.

    4. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by gbjbaanb · · Score: 2

      SuperSpeed USB may be able to compatibly downgrade to full-speed USB communication, but that doesn't mean that anything you plug a SuperSpeed device into is magically SuperSpeed.

      true, but there is 1 crucial factor. When you plug a SuperSpeed device into an existing port, it still works. I'd rather have a fancy device that works on everything than a fancy device that doesn't.

    5. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      Depends on if they're talking about just the female port or the male jack too... I bet there's a billion USB keyboards and mice alone not to mention every laptop, desktop, netbook, some tablets, phones... the list goes on for USB (not just SuperSpeed)... even a lot of monitors these days have USB

    6. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. We have a USB 3.0 to SATA adaptor at work (complete with it's own little blue cable and ridiculous connectors). Which is nice and all, but even though I work for a hardware manufacturer, there aren't any USB 3.0 capable hosts to actually connect it to...

    7. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by EvanED · · Score: 2

      That sounds like an awfully high number, even for normal USB

      If you're counting anything that has a normal USB port, no way, especially if you count every such device that has ever been manufactured instead of requiring it to be currently in use.

      This CNET article claims that there the number of cell phone subscribers hit 5 billion last year. Many of those have USB. Add in all the computers, mice, keyboards, cameras, flash drives, game consoles, controllers, etc. and 10 billion looks almost conservative.

    8. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Additionally, Sony also has started releasing laptops with athunderbolt, even though with their own connector based off of the USB plug.

      The article is simply wrong.

      I hope you were joking. Didn't they learn from Firewire?!

    9. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by localman57 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I hope you were joking. Didn't they learn from Firewire?!

      No. And they didn't learn from iLink either.

    10. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      Define hardware? The head units in my truck and my boat have USB connectors to play audio files. Although I don't own a TV I've seen many newer TVs have USB ports, as do blue ray players and things of that nature. Do game consoles have USB these days? Point is, a lot more than just computers have USB anymore.

    11. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by LehiNephi · · Score: 1

      While your points are all valid, I think the single biggest factor standing in the way of Thunderbolt is simply this: backwards compatibility. There's a huge number of USB devices of all speeds out there, and exactly zero of them will plug into a thunderbolt port. The advantages of Thunderbolt over USB3 aren't significant enough to overcome that obstacle. The number of people for whom 6Gbps is insufficient but 10Gbps is enough is a small slice indeed. The same goes for the 10W vs. 4.5W power availability.

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    12. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by dkuntz · · Score: 1

      Lets not forget, up until the recent IDC, Intel had stated that Apple was the exclusive system with Thunderbolt...so that does give a very narrow number of systems it could be on.

      Also, the Maglock power input connector isnt that common.... because it's only on Apple systems... go figure

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    13. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DurendalMac · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but numerous manufacturers have committed to Thunderbolt and will roll it out early next year. This article is riddled with BS. It's bad and the author should feel bad.

    14. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      You're right, however (IF MY UNDERSTANDING IS CORRECT) USB has this little limitation that nobody (that I've seen) notice is that it is only as fast as the slowest device on the bus.

      --
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    15. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Lucas123 · · Score: 0

      Sony has a Thunderbolt port on the expansion module, not the computer itself. So, that would be a "no". Sony does not have a Thunderbolt port on its computer. So, the article is correct. -1 on your comment.

    16. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Sechr+Nibw · · Score: 1

      Pick your own analogy:

      So, when the PS3 came out, there were how many hundreds of PS3 titles already available, because you could play PS2 games on the original PS3?

      So, when the XBOX360 came out, there were how many hundreds of XBOX360 titles already available, because you could play XBOX games on it?

      So, when the Wii came out, there were how many hundreds of Wii titles already available, because you could play GameCube games on it?

    17. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the situation with Firewire and the original USB eerily similar to the situation we're currently seeing?

      If history's taught us anything, it should be not to drink the Thunderbolt koolaid...

    18. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by had3z · · Score: 1

      yes, but the underlying driving thing is the technology. politics and money push the "deploy" button, but when they do, it's because a newer better technology arrived. maybe we'll jump over tunderbold and move to the Next Big Thing directly

    19. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by MMC+Monster · · Score: 2

      Expensive wires are the problem.

      How much are thunderbolt wires going to cost? Are they realistically going to become as inexpensive as USB wires in 5 -10 years?

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    20. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that the tech industry as a whole now intentionally refuses to use standards that Apple endorses.

      Like AAC a few years ago, with people calling it an Apple tech. FaceTime is not likely to get much support although it's better than a lot of other video chat tech by solving the firewall problems most consumers have with their video calls and auto adapting to bitrate changes. Thunderbolt is now labeled an Apple tech and to fight the 800lb gorilla I'm afraid much of the industry will avoid it in hopes they can make it fail.

      Or maybe like firewire a few cents difference can make or break a chipset.

      --
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    21. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jythie · · Score: 2

      Rumors of Firewire's death are a bit overstated. Sure, USB devices are far more numerous, but there is a lot of firewire stuff out there esp once you get away from consumer grade 'cheap as possible' devices. Just like dirty cheap IDE never managed to kill off SCSI, I doubt USB is going to completely crush Firewire any time soon. I think people tend to forget that 'most common use/case' != 'all use cases', and just because some standard captures the low end market does not mean it doesn't have a place outside that large but not universal domain.

    22. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      You are correct. Also incase people have not noticed Intel is also pushing Thunderbolt. You are going to see Thunderbolt parts as standard on Intel chipsets soon.
      Of course the scary thing is when we see them on mobile devices. How long before I can plug my phone into a monitor that has USB ports for my keyboard and mouse and a network connection?

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    23. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SuperSpeed USB has been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware

      No it hasn't.

      And how do you know that?

      With all the USB 3 flash drives and HDD enclosures and PCs/media players... 10 Billion seems possible.

    24. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note, multiple physical ports on a PC are usually on separate controller ports which means separate buses as far as signaling rate is concerned. You would only have multiple devices on a bus if you used a USB hub to expand it (including devices with built in hubs to allow daisy-chaining, like the keyboard, mouse, and LCD monitor arrangement on my desk).

    25. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    26. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I don't understand about the deal with "Thunderbolt". We have USB as a standard. What do I get with Thunderbolt?

      USB - everywhere, and *cheap*. From $2 microcontroller to virtually all south bridge controllers for computers, can you beat that with Thunderbolt?

      As to transfer speeds, why should I care? 6Gbps vs. 10Gbps, who cares? There already exist dedicated connectors that are not going away. These connectors are high bandwidth. They are, DVI/HDMI and then there is eSATA.

      DVI/HDMI is not going away. Period.

      eSATA - cheap controllers exist. No need to re-invent the wheel for most common drive interface.

      To me, Thunderbolt is like SCSI. Expensive and hardly used. Apple also supported SCSI only disks while IDE was everywhere. Just as SCSI, Thunderbolt will die as it doesn't provide a solution to a problem, it just provides another solution to an already solved problem.

    27. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by ISoldat53 · · Score: 2

      Yes, but how long after TB comes out will there be a box that plugs into TB that accepts USB?

    28. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that's never been true; otherwise your mouse (which are all Low-Speed devices) would slow down your USB hard drives to 1.5 Mb/s.

      USB 2.0 had the issue where the 480 Mb/s max speed was shared by everything on the bus (so two USB hard drives would top out to 480 "total", not "each") but I believe USB 3.0 fixes this.

    29. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by MBCook · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, because they are active. That's what will allow people to transparently switch to optical cables in a few years. You won't have to replace any of your equipment, the cables handle that.

      This is somewhat stupid though. USB has moved into hard drives and such, but it aims at the low end of the market. Mice, keyboard, etc. up through hard drives and scanners. On the other hand, Thunderbolt aims at the top of the market. It aims at displays, large RAID arrays down through hard drives and scanners. Thunderbolt is basically PCIe in a cable. This isn't an either-or. No one in their right mind would ever make a Thunderbolt mouse or USB SAN, there is no reason to think both ports won't be on computers in a few years.

      So is the question "What will people use for connecting external storage in 2 years"? Because that's basically the only question people ever argued over with USB vs. FireWire. I'd say the answer is "USB for most, ThunderBolt for those who really care about performance".

      Remember that since ThunderBolt is faster and PCIe, you can make bridge to let you plug USB SuperSpeed stuff into Thunderbolt ports, just like Apple's Thunderbolt monitors have USB2 and FireWire bridge chips.

      --
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    30. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jythie · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs and Apple are not the end all and be all of computer specs. Not every machine is built for consumers.

      Even within that piece they are clearly talking about what people going down to their local best buy and grabbing a low end camera expect to plug into. Again, 'common consumer use case' != 'all use cases'

      Even within Apple products, only the two low end MacBooks are lacking Firewire, along with other features like a DVD burner. The mid and upper end Macbooks still offer Firewire 3 years after that piece was written.

    31. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1

      Maybe if they count cables.

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    32. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 3, Funny

      Big deal. I want to see Firewire explain why Steve Jobs is dead.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    33. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      Not least of all... Intel have already stated that they'll be shipping a thunderbolt controller as standard as part of their next chipsets.

    34. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      Yeh, because AAC hasn't become the de-facto standard for audio players... oh wait, yes it has.

    35. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by beelsebob · · Score: 2

      Frankly, I don't understand about the deal with "Thunderbolt". We have USB as a standard. What do I get with Thunderbolt?

      High speed, low latency interconnect. The biggest gap that USB doesn't cover is docking stations, Thunderbolt makes it easy to connect a NIC, a USB controller, a graphics card, and a firewire controller all over one cable... USB does not.

      DVI/HDMI is not going away. Period.

      Want a bet? We'll discuss this again when resolutions greater than 2560x1600 become common due to apple introducing retina display laptops, and when 10 bit colour becomes common on high end monitors.

      eSATA - cheap controllers exist. No need to re-invent the wheel for most common drive interface.

      Because eSATA supports a very limited class of devices –storage devices, PCI running over a cable does not.

    36. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by skids · · Score: 1

      I've long held that we should just put cheap 10mbps PoE ethernet transponders in keyboards and mice, and put multiple ethers on laptops/etc. If paranoid, have the devices demand a certain PoE profile from the servicing "switch" before passing traffic, what would keep the devices off the building LAN unless desired. Sure rj-45 isn't the prettiest connector, but the wires even for 10G are certainly cheap -- plus the ethernet ports are arguably more useful if you don't happen to have any external gadgets to use the devices on.

    37. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jo_ham · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure what you're driving at here, but iLink *is* Firewire, it's just Sony's name for it.

    38. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      Which is why I said "a few years ago".

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    39. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Morth · · Score: 1

      Whoosh!

    40. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jo_ham · · Score: 2

      That's what I thought.

      I think this one went past with some polite coughing thought.

    41. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DrXym · · Score: 1
      I like the idea of thunderbolt too. I just hate the execution. It was supposed to be optical and now it's not. It was supposed to be an interconnect bus that all other protocols and ports could ride on, now it's just for crappy displayport and PCI express. It incurs expensive daisy chaining circuitry and ports in every device that implements it. It's been gimped and the move to copper has resulted in expensive active cables with shorter lengths.

      Maybe when optical Thunderbolt does appear and relieves some of these limitations it might be more favourably received and able to separate itself from USB. As it stands I doubt many people could justify the expense of the cables and the implementing hardware when an alternative exists which is capable of high (enough) speeds for much less cost.

    42. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DrXym · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The funny part is if Apple, Sony could agree on a single connector and a single name for the tech they might have enjoyed a lot wider recognition and support for the tech than they did.

    43. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This actually already exists in the form of Apple's TB display. I bet every TB monitor will have it.

    44. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thunderbolt is now labeled an Apple tech and to fight the 800lb gorilla I'm afraid much of the industry will avoid it in hopes they can make it fail.

      That'll just hurt them. There's another application for Thunderbolt besides ultra-high-speed I/O, and that's two-cable docking of laptops (as with a MacBook Pro or Air, and a 27-inch Thunderbolt Display, which adds its own USB, Firewire, and Gigabit Ethernet ports to the laptop's).

      For anyone who makes laptops, snubbing Intel on Thunderbolt to "get Apple" will be like cutting off their own nose to spite their face.

    45. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by AlecC · · Score: 1

      No, that is not true. Of course, if there is a slow device, it may tie up the bus while it is being used. But when it gets off the bus, faster devices can work at their native speed. In fact, USB 2 and USB 3 devices can, to q certain extent, be operating simultaneously because USB3 is actually a separate set of wires.

      --
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    46. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by John+Napkintosh · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      iLink is actually IEEE1394

      --

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    47. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by tonywong · · Score: 1

      Why the USB cheerleading? 10 Billion installations is plain wrong, and Sony's implementation is an early implementation of Thunderbolt with optical signalling over a USB like connector on the computer itself.

      Either Sony jumped the gun before the connector was fully ratified or else Apple managed to pull the rug out from under Sony when the Thunderbolt committee decided to use a modified mini Displayport connector.

    48. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by tonywong · · Score: 1

      Look at the submitter's handle for this article. Look at the article author name. Look at the guy who is trying to 'correct' all the posters saying the author is full of crap. Coincidence? Nice astroturfing...

    49. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by fnj · · Score: 1

      I believe your understanding is incorrect. According to this whitepaper, the transfer speed is individually negotiated between each connection point, and the hub buffers data and matches speed as required. In other words, as I read it, every device attached to that hub operates at its individual negotiated data rate, and the upstream data rate of the hub is always the maximum it negotiates with the host. A slow device does not handicap a fast device, even on the same hub.

      This whitepaper only covers USB 1.0, 1.1, and 2.0, so I suppose the case with USB 3.0 may possibly differ, but I tend to doubt it given the established USB philosophy.

    50. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one in their right mind would ever make a Thunderbolt mouse or USB SAN,

      You sure about that?
      http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816856039

      Pretty easy to share the raid that way if you have a 2nd machine you need to connect it to you can, via direct cable or host networking.

    51. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by adamstew · · Score: 1

      What does the Maglock power input connector have to do with anything Thunderbolt? The Thunderbolt spec uses Mini Display Port, which is a standard port that isn't exclusive to Apple devices.

    52. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And here I am... Forever alone... With my eSATA port.

    53. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by mlauzon · · Score: 2

      Would you look at that, you know the specification number for Firewire, guess this makes you a genius...not!

    54. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by newcastlejon · · Score: 1

      A single connector, perhaps... but when it comes to choosing a common name Apple don't have the best track record. (Though in the latter example forgiveness is easy; 802.11 hardly rolls off one's tongue.)

      In their defence, Apple do appear to do this mainly where there isn't an easily remembered name in common usage already. On a personal note, though, it does warm my cockles to hear people talking about memory sticks yet hardly ever meaning Memory Sticks.

      --
      If God forks the Universe every time you roll a die, he'd better have a damned good memory.
    55. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by adamstew · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The day thunderbolt was announced, I read it and thought to myself... that would be the perfect cable for a laptop docking device. One cable to handle your video, network, a backup hard drive, keyboard, mouse. Right now, when I bring my laptop in to my desk, I plug in power, ethernet, firewire 800, a USB cable and a video cable. I would buy a Thunderbolt "docking station" that hooked all of that up with just two cables... Power and everything else.

      Finally, another application that I haven't heard people talking about is external PCI-E enclosures for laptops... One machine can now be your portable computer and your desktop workstation and allow you to plug any expansion cards that would normally require a desktop in to your laptop... Video cards, high-end audio cards, USB 3.0 cards, video capture cards, etc.

    56. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Forbman · · Score: 1

      I'm holding out for the Monster Thunderbolt wires.

    57. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Wovel · · Score: 1

      That was so blatantly false it was comical. Sometimes you have to wonder if anyone reads the submissions.

    58. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Ossifer · · Score: 1

      Also wrong:

      "Apple is the only systems manufacturer to adopt Thunderbolt, and it has done so as an additional device connectivity port"

      Nope. Thunderbolt port supersedes the Mini-displayport and is backwards compatible...

    59. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by narcc · · Score: 1

      Want a bet? We'll discuss this again when resolutions greater than 2560x1600 become common due to apple introducing retina display laptops, and when 10 bit colour becomes common on high end monitors.

      Both of those things are HILARIOUS -- The first because you believe it and inexplicably tie Apple to it. The second because a monitor that can only display 1,024 colors would have been a joke 10 years ago.

    60. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by RocketRabbit · · Score: 0

      I guess you're trying to be clever, but 10 bit color means 10 bits per pixel these days.

      You can be forgiven because it is all too obvious that you don't know your head from your ass.

    61. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by webnut77 · · Score: 1

      Pick your own analogy:
      So, when the PS3 came out, there were how many hundreds of PS3 titles already available, because you could play PS2 games on the original PS3?
      So, when the XBOX360 came out, there were how many hundreds of XBOX360 titles already available, because you could play XBOX games on it?
      So, when the Wii came out, there were how many hundreds of Wii titles already available, because you could play GameCube games on it?

      Wut? This has nothing to do with cars!

      I'm going for +1 Playful

    62. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DrXym · · Score: 1

      I think Firewire was a pretty memorable name, definitely better than i.Link or IEEE1394. Irrespective, splitting the same tech into 3 different names was confusing. USB has certainly had a pile of confusion but nothing to this extent.

    63. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I have in my house (three residents) 3 phones, 3 cameras, 5 computers, tv, 2 Bluetooth headsets (off the top of my head).

      This is a quick estimation, I'm sure there are more. If we count peripherals as devices (and why wouldn't we, it actually makes more sense in the context pf the article) it is an easy 10 billion. Think of how many USB keyboards, and mice have been sold over the last ten years.

      Ten billion is only 13/person for the EU and the US, certainly more than that have been sold over the years, thought many are probably in the landfills.

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    64. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I enjoy getting USB 1.0 devices, interfaces, and interconnects to effectively transfer data as good as or better than USB 3.0 (SuperSpeed).

    65. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      My house, alone, probably has a couple dozen devices with a USB port. Most people I know have at least 3 or 4 such devices, if they're relatively uninterested in technology.

      I would doubt it's an overestimation, and if it is, it's probably not by much.

    66. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that's never been true; otherwise your mouse (which are all Low-Speed devices) would slow down your USB hard drives to 1.5 Mb/s.

      USB 2.0 had the issue where the 480 Mb/s max speed was shared by everything on the bus (so two USB hard drives would top out to 480 "total", not "each") but I believe USB 3.0 fixes this.

      Fixes it how, with Magic?

      If you have one link from the hub to the computer, how do you plan to get more aggregate downstream bandwidth than that link can handle? This isn't like ethernet, where multiple devices on the same switch could be talking to each other, everything goes through the uplink.

    67. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by sribe · · Score: 1

      Well, as you pointed out, SuperSpeed USB is not on anywhere near 10 billion devices. But that's not all TF got wrong>

      ...and it [Apple] has done so as an additional device connectivity port, keeping SuperSpeed USB on its computers.

      Apple has not shipped a single computer with SuperSpeed USB.

    68. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Hi-speed vs full-speed caused a bit of confusion for a time.

    69. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "external PCI-E enclosures for laptops"

      You mean like this:

      http://www.magma.com/expressbox1.asp

    70. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      The maglock power connector isn't common because Apple patented it, and won't licence the patent to anyone else now so they can keep it an apple-exclusive feature.

      Thunderbolt is designed by Intel (Though they call it Light Peak) - they have an arrangement with Apple for initial release, with Apple getting to be the first to release the technology, but Intel doesn't plan to keep it Apple-exclusive forever.

    71. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Not alone. I got a PCIe card for my mac pro to add eSATA. I use a four-drive port-expander bay, and plug drives in and out like removeable media.
      I like to design video filters. Thus I work with raw HD video a lot. So I need a great deal of storage, most of which sits idle for months until I feel the urge to work on that project. This method seemed like a good way to handle it.

    72. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by scot4875 · · Score: 2

      Umm, I think you mean 10 bits per color channel, because 10 bits per pixel is precisely 1024 colors (or 1024 color map entries, if you're going with a palette-based display mode).

      You can be forgiven because it is all too obvious that you don't know your head from your ass.

      Quoted for irony. Of course, I think the GP was being somewhat intentionally dense, but your correction is hilarious.

      --Jeremy

      --
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    73. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      I heard Thunderbolt can do 4 channels bi-directionally. Does that mean 40 gbps in one direction? With -2/10 for overhead, that's 32 gbps or PCIe 2.0 8x, right? But why do people keep saying it's only equivalent to 4x?

    74. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by harlequinn · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see manufacturers put only Thunderbolt ports on the PC's motherboard and then sell separate break out boxes (that go in a 3.5" or 5.25" bay or externally). That way I get to choose the other connectivity options I want.

      Right now Apple is the largest manufacturer of PCs in the world - so they have some clout in pushing Thunderbolt.

    75. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Thunderbolt is designed by Intel (Though they call it Light Peak)

      Nope, they call it Thunderbolt. Light Peak was the development code name.

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    76. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Too much latency?

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    77. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      I think it's pretty obvious who picked the right connector: Apple. On laptops, it really doesn't matter, but on desktops, it does. Apple made one connector that carries both your display data and peripheral data. This means that your computer under the table is connected to a monitor on top of the table, and your peripherals fan out from there, on top of the desk, where they are easily accessible.

      I can't imagine why Sony felt they had to do things differently. It's bad enough combining eSATA with USB, but combining Thunderbolt with USB means that there are now three different and incompatible types of peripherals that you can hook up to USB ports on certain models of Sony's products. Great way to create customer confusion. Yikes.

      Somebody should be beaten over the head with a clue-by-four for that one.

      Likewise with FireWire. Sony used a smaller connector because they thought the standard connector was too big. Well, not only is the 4-pin FireWire connector flimsy as heck because of its size, but also it is visually almost indistinguishable at a quick glance from both mini-USB and the power connector used by a lot of manufacturers' camcorders....

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    78. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by oblio_one · · Score: 1

      You've got that exactly backwards, a game is a client device to the system's host.
      If I put out a new PS2 game when PS3 had just came out, the game works on "hundreds of purchased game systems" ( the # of PS2's plus the # of PS3's purchased.)
      If I design a game for an upcoming PS4, it works on how many systems?

    79. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. As I understand it, TB is an external version of an internal bus. Putting a USB port on it is just one of it's many uses.

    80. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 1

      The funny part is if Apple, Sony could agree on a single connector and a single name for the tech

      Uhh, you do realise that you're talking about Sony here right? The only reason why they don't use a gratuitously incompatible and proprietary version of electricity is that their engineers haven't been able to figure out how to yet.

    81. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by MBCook · · Score: 1

      I know there are RAIDs that have USB interfaces, but their performance doesn't match the FireWire (or now often eSATA) versions. But a real storage array, a full SAN, would be crazy on USB. It would just be a massive waste of money. But one of Intel's demos, IIRC, was a full SAN or large RAID while they were doing other things (such as running two monitors). Thunderbolt has the capacity to run something that intense.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    82. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jedwidz · · Score: 1

      Erm, and does 'pixel' mean something different too now? We used to have 24 bits for each of those.

      I blame the digital camera manufacturers and their bogus 'megapixel' counts. First we get a million bytes per megabyte and now this 8-(

    83. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by jezwel · · Score: 1
      There is already a phone that has HDMI out and the capability to connect USB/bluetooth mice and keyboards to it, including network resources over wifi.

      It's weird seeing and using your phone via a 40" display.

      Back OT; I'm hoping to see Thunderbolt deployed as quickly as possible, with daisy chaining on monitors and external hard drives. Get it into comsumer electronics such as TV's, amplifiers, st top boxes, PVRs etc ASAP.

    84. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All three current consoles have at least 2 USB ports with variations of these consoles having 3 or 4 total. Some of last generation's consoles were even using USB although in the case of the Xbox it was a modified connector.

    85. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, a backwards compatibility analogy... OK I'll bite.

      If you buy a new PS3 today, you will have no PS2 backward compatibility. None of those games will work. Period. Knowing Sony there's always a chance they could restrict your ability to play original PS games on it with a firmware update.

      If you buy a new Xbox 360 today, you will only be able to play original Xbox games if you have a hard drive, and don't think that you can purchase a 4GB (flash based) console and add a USB hard drive to it to get it to be backwards compatible.

      If you buy a new Wii today chances are fairly good that you will be able to play Gamecube games on it. I specify "fairly good" because Nintendo rolled out an updated version of the console that does not support Gamecube games or accessories in late August with little fanfare. It looks fairly identical to the old one and it's unknown if or how they are going to inform buyers that it isn't backwards compatible.

      SuperSpeed USB on the other hand is a hardware standard that will have to maintain compatibility with USB2 in order to bear the logo. In other words, it WILL be backwards compatible now and 10 years from now.

    86. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by kmoser · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, last time they stuck to their guns in a war of attrition, Sony's Betamax format got beat out by VHS, despite being technically superior.

    87. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      Further to this, i have run into compatibility issues with buggy Superspeed USB hardware/firmware. I've actually been telling users to not use the super speed ports on various machines unless they know the device in question is usb3 compatible.

      The two connectors serve different purposes, and USB of any flavour is never going to be good for what thunderbolt brings to the table.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    88. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Likewise with FireWire. Sony used a smaller connector because they thought the standard connector was too big. Well, not only is the 4-pin FireWire connector flimsy as heck because of its size, but also it is visually almost indistinguishable at a quick glance from both mini-USB and the power connector used by a lot of manufacturers' camcorders....

      Let's not forget that the 4 pin implementation removed the ability to pass power to the device, rendering it largely useless for hdd or other devices that could have benefited from integrated power supply

    89. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      Explains all the battery explosions a few years back...

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    90. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. I have seen high-speed USB devices fail to work with super speed ports, and if a device actually needs the speed of super speed usb to function correctly, then no, it won't work.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    91. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      You're looking to thunderbolt to solve the wrong problem. Thunderbolt isn't meant to be a cheap generic connector, and doesn't attempt to be.

      Its for peripherals that won't work over USB. Its basically PCI-E on a cable.

      Being able to plug in a fibre-channel HBA into my laptop via thunderbolt would be awesome. Ditto for video adapters, etc.

      Looking at thunderbolt and thinking "i can plug joysticks and keyboards in via USB much cheaper!" is completely missing the point. Its not a replacement for USB.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    92. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      No, its not the case because most machines these days have more than one USB bus.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    93. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      Exactly. the best analogy i have for thunderbolt that networking guys will understand is that its like a cisco GBIC or SFP slot. You plug in an appropriate interface card/transceiver, depending on how far you want to run the cable. i.e., 1.5km run means you need a long-hall fibre GBIC interface. 10cm means you can get away with a 1000baseT interface.

      And sticking with that, Cisco 10GB-E modules for the Cisco 6506Es in my rack cost over a thousand dollars each. Thunderbolt, also running at 10GB, is cheap.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    94. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      So, basically what you're saying is that in a few years, thunderbolt will be ubiquitous?

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    95. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by smash · · Score: 1

      Because super speed has been out for about 6 months.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    96. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't connect something I need to go fast to an USB hub anyways. An external hdd gets it's own port, because timesharing can't be good for speed (even if all the devices are at the same speed).
      Hubs are, by definition, quite stupid devices. In ethernet networks this matters a lot, beause there one device can slow the whole network down, as the slowest device determines the complete hub's speed. I dread these 16 port USB hubs and hope they figure out how to make an USB switch soon enough.
      Dunno how it is with different USB ports on the same root hub (internally the USB ports are structured into root hubs. This may only be software).

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    97. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      1) It's well known apple are working on Retina Display laptops, that's why HiDPI mode has appeared in Lion - note, HiDPI mode only actually allows OS X to function properly if your monitor is larger than or equal to 2560x1600 in resolution
      2) 10 bit colour is well known to mean 10 bits per channel these days, it's supported already by HP, NEC, and eizo's S-IPS panels.

    98. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but officially, the purpose was supposed to have been for camcorders and other non-powered devices. Then Sony decided to further abuse the standard by using it for laptops, which was just plain egregious.

      Then again, with those tiny laptops they were building, they probably didn't have the power budget for a real FireWire port....

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    99. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I am wrong, but shouldn't it be an USB switch then? A hub repeats all packets to all connections (and thus all at the same speed). A switch actually looks at the adress and sends it only to the correct one.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    100. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by neokushan · · Score: 1

      Apple and Sony came up with their own names for IEEE1394, iLink and Firewire, yet iLink was Sony's name? I think my brain just coughed.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    101. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same with cars,

      Why do we care if we travel at 60 KM/H or 100KM/H or for others, 45 MPH or 60 MPH? Makes no difference to the outcome does it.

      Well not over a short distance.

    102. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by DrXym · · Score: 1

      Sony's name was i.LINK but yeah. Stupid name. According to Wikipedia even Texas Instruments was involved and called their impl Lynx. Firewire was the prominent name and IMO would have been a perfectly acceptable moniker for the whole tech assuming the parties had cooperated.

    103. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Kristian+T. · · Score: 1

      The last time Sony stuck to their guns, they actually won in Bluray vs HD-DVD. This is still the exception though: MemoryStick, MiniDisc and Metamax all R.I.P. The point is that the proprietary game has more loosers than winners - so the vendors should just learn to agree on standards. Fragmented techs see way lower adoption rates than unified standards. 1394 is dead or dying (regardless of implementor), CEC is struggling because of propritary naming and some incompatibility. BluRay didn't take off before HD-DVD threw in the towel... the list goes on.

      Consumers just wan't universal compatibility - not vendor lock-in. And they vote accordingly with their feet.

      --
      Run with the lemmings, and you'll get your feet wet.
    104. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by bWareiWare.co.uk · · Score: 1

      Switching to optical justifies the optical cables being active, it doesn't justify the copper ones being active. Either way it is still sending the signals over copper to the active part of the cable.

      Given none of the 10gbps Ethernet PHYs need active cabling the raw speed excuse is also a little thin.

    105. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      And this problem is compounded by costs. $90 PHY's, $50 cables.

      I suspect I'll be buying Thunderbolt gear when both repeating PHY's and optical cables are under $10.

      That's probably 2015, unless Intel is really motivated.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    106. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by m50d · · Score: 1

      High speed, low latency interconnect. The biggest gap that USB doesn't cover is docking stations, Thunderbolt makes it easy to connect a NIC, a USB controller, a graphics card, and a firewire controller all over one cable... USB does not.

      Ok, I can see that's useful. If we ever get to the stage where I can take my laptop around to a friend's and plug it into their docking station, that's brilliant. Can't see it ever happening, particularly with apple involved (every day I see guys with apple laptops running around trying to find the right fancy apple cable to connect to a projector, it's not like VGA has been the standard for over 20 years or anything...), but it's a worthy goal.

      But until the connections become ubiquitous, USB is going to be a far better choice for hard drives - if you're buying an external hard drive at all it's because you want portability over performance, and USB gives you the best odds of being able to read your hard drive at your friend's house.

      --
      I am trolling
    107. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by C0vardeAn0nim0 · · Score: 1

      what the parent meant is that instead of using the same standard plug everybody else was using, sony developed their own connector for firewire. so if you had a sony device and a non-sony computer, you'd need an adapter.

      basicaly sony reinvented the firewire "wheel" by making it square.

      --
      What ? Me, worry ?
    108. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, and a few hundred million other users, don't want to know about different types of connectors. Why can't we standardise on a single technology, and have Thunderbolt mice?

    109. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Want a bet? We'll discuss this again when resolutions greater than 2560x1600 become common due to apple introducing retina display laptops, and when 10 bit colour becomes common on high end monitors.

      Now this I would like to see... but not as long as Apple can sell a 1024x768 screen for $499 (the iPad 1 & 2).

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    110. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by fnj · · Score: 1

      For whatever reason they are always called hubs; not like ethernet.

    111. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Yes I know. My wife has a tablet that can do that.
      But with Thunderbolt you will have only a single connection that supplies the video and can power the phone as well as give you a few USBs and a wired network.

      In a way I see the mobile phone becoming the PC. You just put in a dock a work and it is your computer. You put it in dock in your car and it runs the nav and infotainment system of your car. You plug it into your home entrainment system and it becomes a game console and meda player.
      Of course your tablet will do the same things as well.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    112. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Creepy · · Score: 1

      I don't know if Sony used a different plug or not, but iLink is Sony not wanting to pay to use the brand name Firewire, which was owned by Apple - both are IEEE1394.

    113. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... (so two USB hard drives would top out to 480 "total", not "each") but I believe USB 3.0 fixes this.

      Only in the sense that instead of topping out at 480Mbs it tops out at 4.8Gbs, which is a lot faster than even fast spinning platters that top out at around 1Gbs. You could probably saturate USB 3.0 with a single, good SSD, though. Depends on what kind of overhead there is.

    114. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Creepy · · Score: 1

      By Thunderbolt committee, do you mean Intel? They developed and own the technology and AFAIK, nobody else had any input. It was brought to market in a collaboration with Apple, but that was mainly for Apple's mini DisplayPort technology, which Intel thinks will help broaden adoption because it is well suited to laptops.

      Sony, OTOH, appears to be implementing the Intel prototype from a couple of years ago, which is essentially a modified USB 3.0 (or very early 4.0?) with an added optical channel for Thunderbolt. See http://www.engadget.com/2009/09/24/video-intels-light-peak-running-an-hd-display-while-transferri/

      10 billion USB connectors wouldn't surprise me in the least - my PC has 8, my wife's PC 6, my old PC, my 10 year old mac and my laptop 4 each, the add-on card for my old PC 4 (USB 2.0 vs 1.0 because the 1.0 controller flaked out on the Mobo, but everything else worked), my cell phone 1, my wife's cell phone 1, each of my last 3 cell phones 1 each, each of my four cameras 1 each, my satellite TV 1... I probably missed many more - USB is basically being shoved into everything.

    115. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by dkuntz · · Score: 1

      A comparison... though I wasnt to specific on that part, my bad.

      It'd be like an article saying that round power plugs are better because they're used on a quadrillion devices, and the new fancy magnetic just hasnt caught on.

      Yes, it's patented by Apple and thunderbolt isnt... but the main point stands, until recently, it was only on Apple hardware...

      --
      OMG... I have a sig?
    116. Re:TFA (-1, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I put a large RAID array in external to the computer, offers no advantage (a disadvantage, actually) to 10 gigabit ethernet RAID storage solution? A scanner is capable of pushing even RAW picture data at 10 GBps, call me up. I'd like to see one that doesn't cost $100,000.

      Even USB 2.0 supports external video cards, although limited by speed. SuperSpeed USB should alleviate that problem.

      An extra 4gbps isn't going to make any difference to home consumers, and the majority of businesses. Hard drives can't sustain that speed. Scanners can't. Displays MAYBE, but that's what an HDMI/VGA (or god forbid DP) ports are for. Sure you can plug in number(?) different screens into a TB setup, but who will?

      I also wonder if practically putting a wire directly to the PCIe bus could possibly lead to hacking of the bus...

      So for all intents and purposes, TB is a waste of money for the average consumer.

  2. Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Tufriast · · Score: 2

    When the Compact Disc first came out not many had any chance to play one. It was expensive, part of extravagant home theatre systems, and only the rich could afford it. Years later it was adopted by the masses once it was able to be cheaply reproduced. The same goes for this piece of technology. While truly innovative and new technology almost never starts out as being ubiquitous; it does move us forward. This is my point: it is better, faster, and eventually it will be cheaper too. That and I heard Apple had exclusivity on the hardware totally until 2012 with regards to it. http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/02/24/intel_details_thunderbolt_as_exclusive_to_apple_until_2012.html

    --
    Help me, help you. - Jerry McGuire
    1. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not quite true.
      I bought a CD player in 1984 fro $200 on sale, not exactly for the rich.

    2. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful


      It was expensive, part of extravagant home theatre systems, and only the rich could afford it.

      All true. It had one thing going for it, that thunderbolt doesn't. It was orders of magnitude better in features. When the CD first came out, it was MUCH higher quality than a record or tape. It was also random access, which no other music technology had. (Unless you want to count lifting a record player arm and trying to figure out where the track started). Those features made people WANT this technology, and there was no real competitor for the features CD offered. Nobody really liked skipping records, the huge format, tapes that break, or fast forwarding through a song you didn't like.

      What's the hugely differentiating feature that thunderbolt has? Faster specs? Not gonna cut it against ubiquity.

    3. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1

      That's the equivalent of nearly $450 with inflation factored in. And that's the sale price.

      --
      SSC
    4. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but I was a high school student then, pumping gas for minimum wage. If I could afford it then, anyone who wanted one could afford it.

    5. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      But Thunderbolt is more like Laserdisc in that respect...

    6. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You had no fucking bills. Of course you could afford it.

    7. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Ja'Achan · · Score: 2

      You can't make something take over the market until all the people who don't want one can afford it.

    8. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by MBCook · · Score: 1

      Can I daisy chain 2 displays and a little RAID array over USB? Can USB hold an external graphic card (and do a good job of it)? What about a custom accelerator card?

      Thunderbolt does things USB can't. They aren't used for the same thing, their uses just overlap some.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    9. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That was largely my thought on the matter. Thunderbolt has some cool features, but it doesn't bring a whole lot to the table that isn't already available from other technologies.

      And that's going to be a huge problem, it does have uses, but most of them appear to have alternatives that are already on the market. I'm sure that the interface will live on for a niche audience, but bandwidth is just not compelling enough for enough people to give it much traction. At present even most HDD have a hard time keeping up with an eSATA connection. I have a feeling that those buggy mainboards that were only usably by Apple probably killed it off right there.

    10. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by tmp31416 · · Score: 0

      "When the CD first came out, it was MUCH higher quality than a record or tape"

      i will have to take exception to that.
      i'm old enough to have been an adult when the cd came out -- and i can tell you, the cd was *not* much higher quality than the current mainstay, the lp.

      the cd was new and shiny (literally!), but at the time, it *didn't sound right*. for example, pianos sounded metallic and tinny. stereo imaging was muddled up. and so on. it took the recording companies until 1990 or thereabouts to come out with cds that didn't sound fundamentally wrong.

      some critics of the formats were saying initially that the fault lied with the format of the cd (i.e., 16bits sampled at 44.1khz) and that "they" needed to up the resolution... in the late '90s, i read in the specialized press & heard from other audiophiles that it turned out that the main culprit of the bad sound was not insufficient resolution (16/44.1), but rather excessive jitter in the digitizing/recording chain... and, apparently, the fact that the "first few batches" of cds were sampled at less than 16 bits, due to design flaws in the early equipment used to digitize existing recordings!

      once they got *properly sampled* audio to work with, the cd started to sound ok.

      some people will dispute the rumoured causes of early digital audio's ills, and i will welcome any correction. i'm just an "innocent bystander" who goes with what he read & heard in the audio media.

      but they cannot dispute the fact that early cds sounded like crap and that it took a few years before that changed.

    11. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by tmp31416 · · Score: 1

      oops. mea culpa. instead of:
                "some critics of the formats were saying initially that the fault lied with the format of the cd"
      i should have typed:
                "some critics of the format were saying initially that the fault lied with the sampling rate of the cd"
      and sorry for the other typos.

    12. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      Can I daisy chain 2 displays and a little RAID array over USB? Can USB hold an external graphic card (and do a good job of it)? What about a custom accelerator card?

      Thunderbolt does things USB can't. They aren't used for the same thing, their uses just overlap some.

      When $500 consumer-grade laptops are coming stock with 500gb drives and happily pushing better-than-1080p-HD-graphics, 99.99% of people will never need to hook up anything. Unfortunately for your point, that day is now.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of Thunderbolt as a high-speed interconnect. Its just that wired interconnects are getting less and less interesting to anyone - but the other interesting point is that USB is going the same way. Many mice and keyboards are bluetooth. Printers are increasingly wi-fi. Displays are still wired, but streaming at least 1080p is not expensive these days and getting cheaper and more common...

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    13. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I daisy chain 2 displays and a little RAID array over USB? Can USB hold an external graphic card (and do a good job of it)? What about a custom accelerator card?

      No, but you can with Displayport and USB 3.0, both of which are available now at low prices. I'm not sure what kind of graphics card you're planning to run over a 10Gbps connection, especially if you plan on pairing it with a RAID controller, but don't expect miracles. You can, however, buy a USB3.0 display adapter right now. Admittedly, while a simple external video card could probably handle higher resolutions in 2d, the USB 3.0 display adapter is just a simple cable and doesn't take up any space.

      Thunderbolt does things USB can't. They aren't used for the same thing, their uses just overlap some.

      While you're correct, I think the things that TB does that USB can't are a little bit higher end than what you're thinking. Great for the high end requirements of video editing and such, but pointless for the majority of users.

    14. Re:Ubiquity vs. Moving Forward by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I was an adult when CDs came out. They were *much* higher quality. No tape hiss. No LP pops. The distortion may not have been your preferred distortion, and your cmplaints caused the loudness wars, but that wasn't an issue with CDs. And the "critics" complained because they needed to say something. Complaints sell more than acceptance. It's these same critics who claimed a green marker on the edge would improve the sound of a CD. They were inherently ignorant and wanted to fight the digital era because it made it harder to sell expensive cables and such. That's the reason the critics agreed CD was bad. Then, after 5 years, they figured out they could sell weighted CD players and charge $100 for some $0.20 lead weights to "stabilize the sound of CDs" and such, and dropped their complaints.

      Have you not noticed that in 1990 the complaints stopped? CDs didn't change. I have CDs older than that now, and they sound fine. It was mainly tehchophobia and retroactive history that gave you the memories you have of CDs. I remember that CDs "just worked" and didn't have the massive sound artifacts associated with analog (the hiss and pop the "critics" obviously love because they can sell you $10,000 fixes for those problems).

  3. TFA (-2, wrong) by Quick+Reply · · Score: 3, Informative

    Also, Apple has not have SuperSpeed USB on any of it's computers.

    1. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Funny

      They are holding out for LudicrousSpeed USB.

    2. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Apple would never do that because they would have to give their computers a plaid color scheme.

    3. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Lucas123 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, that was my fault in the Slashdot submission, which I always write up far too quickly. The article doesn't say Apple has Superspeed USB on its systems -- the Slashdot summary does. Doesn't anyone on Slashdot take time to actually read the article?

    4. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't anyone on Slashdot take time to actually read the article?

      Nope.

    5. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why they call it SuperSpeed. What's SuperSpeed today, is TurtleSpeed tomorrow...

    6. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by JabrTheHut · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, that was my fault in the Slashdot submission, which I always write up far too quickly. The article doesn't say Apple has Superspeed USB on its systems -- the Slashdot summary does. Doesn't anyone on Slashdot take time to actually read the article?

      If you took the time to actually read Slashdot, you'd know the answer was no...

      --
      Work like no one is watching. Dance like you've never been hurt. Make love like you don't need the money.
    7. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm waiting until they go Plaid :)

    8. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by SuricouRaven · · Score: 0

      And it isn't as if USB hasn't been through that before. The first USB tech was just USB. Then came high-speed USB. Then full-speed USB. Now superspeed USB. What comes next? Ludicrous speed?

    9. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by simcop2387 · · Score: 1

      Actually Full Speed USB came before Hi-Speed USB. USB 1.1 was renamed to FullSpeed USB so that manufacturers wouldn't look bad in name if they continued to not support HiSpeed USB. It was the second stupidest decision they made.

    10. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by horza · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is beyond pathetic now. The only reason anybody reads is because of the comments, the stories posted are often dupes and lies. When Digg died a lot of people came back to Slashdot over other alternatives due to the better S/N ratio. However the pathetic level of the editors has become intolerable.

      There was a recent /. article on what new technical features people would like to see. Save the money and pay some 3rd world outsourcer $5/hour, who will still have better English skills than most /. editors, to proof read articles and reject the ones where the summary does not match the actual linked article. It REALLY is not that hard.

      Phillip.

    11. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This shouldn't be marked as wrong, it should be marked as troll or plussed for being funny. :)

    12. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by dudpixel · · Score: 1

      We're going to have to add the "slashdot isn't the like it was in the good old days" to the growing list of slashdot memes.

      --
      This seemed like a reasonable sig at the time.
    13. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Also, Apple has not have SuperSpeed USB on any of it's computers.

      Because Intel does not have SuperSpeed USB on any of hits chipsets. It does have Thunderbolt on its chipsets though.

      Intel's planning on adding USB 3.0 to their chipsets in 2012.

      Motherboards and other equipment with USB 3.0 ports have them because they use an external controller.

    14. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      See, I'm still getting it wrong!

    15. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Doesn't anyone on Slashdot take time to actually read the article?

      Well, usually there's at least one post to explain that the summary is utterly wrong, so that puts the lower bound at one. Besides I'm curious how to this "slashdot effect" works when nobody reads TFA. Maybe we just open it in a background tab, then go on to read the comments instead? On that note, I haven't read TFA yet....

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    16. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by omnichad · · Score: 1

      They were dumb enough to call their first revision "full speed." Next, HiSpeed was taken, and no -- "full" speed is not faster than "Hi" speed... You can't expect too much from them.

    17. Re:TFA (-2, wrong) by toddestan · · Score: 1

      It's not surprising, as Apple was one of the last to put USB 2.0 on their computers as they busy pushing Firewire at the time.

  4. Apple doesn't offer USB 3.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Huh? When did Apple start offering USB 3.0? AFAIK they're still shipping USB 2.0 only.

  5. USB 3.0 by na1led · · Score: 0

    At 6Gbps who needs any other peripheral ports like SATA. Just give me a motherboard with USB 3.0 and that's it.

    --
    -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
  6. Re:Slashdot (-1, wrong) by mike260 · · Score: 1

    Dear Slashdot,
    How about taking a little more pride in what you choose to show to the 8 bajillion people who hit your front-page every day?

  7. Firewire by suso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hmm, this sounds just like the Firewire vs. USB competition with Apple pushing Firewire. We saw how that turned out. We all know that being better doesn't mean anything in this industry.

    1. Re:Firewire by chaim79 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Wow, how many points wrong can you get...

      Actually I give up, you have so much wrong about firewire that it's pointless to correct you point for point...

      The reason Firewire is more expensive is that it's a system that requires some processing on both sides, any device that plugs into firewire has to have sufficient smarts to know what it needs in order to operate, USB on the other hand is a dumb protocol, all the processing is handled on the Host (PC) side, and all the devices plugged into it need very little smarts, this directly effects chip/design costs of peripherals. Firewire was actually designed with the concept that a scanner with a firewire port and a printer with a firewire port could be connected together and pictures printed without using computer resources.

      USB also has the limitation of regimented and inflexible bandwidth (at least as of USBv2, v3 might change that). Which means while USB 2 may have 480mb of 'bandwidth' only a small chunk of that is usable by any one device, Firewire however is flexible, not only can it portion the bandwidth to the devices need but it can also use "Isochronous" (regular dedicated) bandwidth, allowing high-priority/bandwidth systems to transfer information, such as video/audio streams and critical systems (some internal aircraft systems use 1394 bus).

      You want lots of high-speed external storage access, check some benchmarks, firewire will beat out USB for real-world performance, even though they are fairly matched just reading spec numbers.

      Firewire is both faster and better than USB, however it's more expensive in both hardware and design/implementation, which is why USB has won that fight, the majority of people are all about cheep, not better.

      --
      DEMETRIUS: Villain, what hast thou done?
      AARON: Villain, I have done thy mother.
      Shakespeare invents 'your mom'
    2. Re:Firewire by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

      Apple always had USB _and_ Firewire. Firewire is the industry standard for non-PCI studio audio interfaces (pretty much all of the semi-pro and portable market) and until very recently also for digital video cameras. Firewire is pretty niche, but it's not been a failure, it's been a high-performance esoteric option, and I have no doubt Thunderbolt will be the same.

    3. Re:Firewire by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Just because USB was everywhere and Firewire wasn't doesn't mean firewire was a failure. Just because you largely see SATA ship doesn't mean SAS was a failure, or worth it to invest in it.

      Let's get over this mindset, please.

      Thunderbolt = Speedy all-in-one PCI-E on a thin, ubiquitous cable(compared to other external PCI-E solutions).

      USB 3 = Really frickin' fast USB(Also capable of being carried on Thunderbolt)

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    4. Re:Firewire by boley1 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, this sounds just like the USB vs PS/2 competition with Apple pushing USB. We saw how that turned out. We all know that being better doesn't mean anything in this industry... except keep at it and you may be come the most or (second most) valuable company in the world.

    5. Re:Firewire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, we've seen Microsoft do well over the years.

    6. Re:Firewire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Apple always had USB _and_ Firewire

      That's BS. The iPod I'm listening to that has only FireWire disagrees with you.

    7. Re:Firewire by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Firewire failed because Apple wanted to collect royalties for every device. If they'd dropped that notion we'd be using Firewire instead of USB now.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    8. Re:Firewire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what way did Firewire fail? It ran high-end video and audio equipment and drives for over ten years where USB was simply not a contender. It was a high-end data interface than simply got phased out when there was no need for it. Apple provided USB alongside it the whole time. Thunderbolt is the same - it isn't meant to cover the same use cases as USB3, and USB3 can't do some of the things Thunderbolt is aimed at.

    9. Re:Firewire by networkzombie · · Score: 2

      If people believe that cheap, dumb, and easy is better, then you are completely wrong, and they do.

    10. Re:Firewire by SLi · · Score: 1

      We all know that being better doesn't mean anything in this industry.

      Well, if a vendor or a coalition of vendors demands 10x the royalties for a possibly slightly superior technology, I'm not sure that being better should mean anything. Otherwise if every vendor started doing that for every piece of technology, we would suddenly have very expensive hardware.

    11. Re:Firewire by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Firewire was great, but it was a huge security headache, you did get additional speed, but you were plugging a foreign device essentially straight into your computer's RAM. It was nice for times where you were needing to dump a stuck kernel, but you could run into some quirks. I remember one time connecting a laptop to a desktop via Firewire and then plugging a USB peripheral into the desktop, only for it to show up as attached to the laptop.

    12. Re:Firewire by madprof · · Score: 1

      This is nothing like USB vs PS/2. USB had more advantages over PS/2 than Thunderbolt has over USB 3.0, and replaced more than just PS/2, it also replaced serial connections too.

      The PC industry also started moving towards USB at the same time.

    13. Re:Firewire by suso · · Score: 1

      In what way did Firewire fail?

      Back when USB and Firewire where new (mid-90s). Apple was trying to push Firewire as the primary connection medium instead of USB and Microsoft was trying to push USB. Sure Firewire lasted for 10 years as a high end device, but I think its developers and supporters intended for it to be the ubiquitous connection that USB is now.

    14. Re:Firewire by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Firewire didn't lose to USB. Firewire lost to Ethernet. Printers & high-end scanners, external storage (NAS), and many other high-speed device-to-device interconnects. Ethernet just makes sense, and ever more devices are getting gigE ports.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    15. Re:Firewire by armanox · · Score: 1

      Would you rather it have USB 1? Because 2.0 wasn't an option at the time of FW only iPods. Also, IIRC the iMac was the first computer to ditch legacy ports for USB.

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    16. Re:Firewire by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      Back when USB and Firewire where new (mid-90s). Apple was trying to push Firewire as the primary connection medium instead of USB and Microsoft was trying to push USB. Sure Firewire lasted for 10 years as a high end device, but I think its developers and supporters intended for it to be the ubiquitous connection that USB is now.

      That explains why there was such an outcry when Microsoft forced manufacturers to stop providing PS/2 ports, even though every PC was still being sold with PS/2 mice and keyboards at the time.

      Oh no, wait, that was Apple who did that wasn't it? My bad...

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    17. Re:Firewire by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Firewire is both faster and better than USB, however it's more expensive in both hardware and design/implementation, which is why USB has won that fight, the majority of people are all about cheep, not better.

      Except if you wanted really fast, then firewire HDDs were inferior to an internal HDD due to translation costs. eSATA was the first standard where performance on internal and external disks became approximately equal since it's basically the same protocol. Firewire solved a problem that didn't exists, for printers and scanners and other peripherals the actual data transfer speed is usually higher than the scanning/printing speed. For the most part it was an overpriced, overkill solution.

      The only thing it excelled at was as you say stable bandwidth, to capture recordings from DV and HDV cameras. But as we moved to flash and HDD based cameras that wasn't important, it's just a file on the camera that we can optimistically send as fast as we manage and resend any segment that didn't make it. I loved it when I could get rid of that fickle capture process, since even with Firewire tiny hangups would lead to frame drops. My computer is not a RT system and so hooking up a RT firewire device just didn't give you the alleged benefits.

      In summary, Firewire is one port I'm not going to miss from any consumer system.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    18. Re:Firewire by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Apple never used PS/2.

    19. Re:Firewire by boley1 · · Score: 1

      Good Point, but Thunderbolt is not so much a replacement for USB as a replacement for Firewire, DisplayPort, DVI, VGA, and eSATA. So I still think, Apple pushing USB over PS/2 is a much better analogy than the parent post having Apple pushing Firewire over USB (which never happened).

    20. Re:Firewire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I wouldn't "rather it had only USB 1". But that wasn't the question, was it?

  8. subby misquotes article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you actually read TFA, it does't say that SuperSpeed USB has been installed in 10 million devices. It says that USB has been installed in 10 million devices.

  9. Shaky ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Far as I know, comparing apples to oranges does not work. Thunderbolt shares the security problems of firewire (as far as I know,) and even if thats faster, if my understanding is right, its not something you're going to want due to this.

  10. Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the art by voss · · Score: 2

    10 gps vs 4.8 gps isnt enough to make me want to add an extra port.

  11. Where are the data only pci-e Thunerbolt cards? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    As you can find usb 3.0 pci-e cards and having Thunerbolt on the main system board is slowing down roll out.

  12. Acer and Asus signed up for Thunderbolt by jmcbain · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Acer and Asus have signed up for Thunderbolt and are expected to deliver PCs with Thunderbolt next year. Except more motherboards to have Thunderbolt as well, and once that occurs, Dell and other has-beens will do the same.

  13. Bad analogy... by Junta · · Score: 0

    With CD, there wasn't a real good 'legacy' technology to transition from that had a strong competitor to CD.

    This would be more like Intel releasing a new x86 processor that is *almost* as good as a hypothetical ARM chip that beats the x86 offering on price, performance, and electricity usage. The market may fail the ARM chips because x86 can at least run N-1 things. USB 3.0 is a single connector that services tons of 'legacy' usage, is technically worse than Thunderbolt *but* not so much so that anyone will notice. It's actually very reminiscent of USB v. Firewire.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:Bad analogy... by tepples · · Score: 1

      This would be more like Intel releasing a new x86 processor that is *almost* as good as a hypothetical ARM chip that beats the x86 offering on price, performance, and electricity usage.

      Does this parable refer to the Atom CPU?

    2. Re:Bad analogy... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Thunderbolt is more like an option that wants to displace DVD and BluRay.

      Collectively DVD and BD have this massive legacy library. A newer player has legacy support for the older content.

      An entirely new option has to completely ditch all of that and may have inferior selection. There may be things that are simply not available on the "hot shiny new" option despite the fact that it is "hot, shiny, and new".

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  14. How Will Thurberbolt work with pci-e video cards by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    How Will Thurberbolt work with pci-e video cards?

    As you need a way to link the display port bus to the MB based TB data bus and I don't see any plans any where saying how they plan to pull that off.

  15. USB 3 controller recommendations? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    I'm looking to increase my backup times to an external USB3 drive. My PC only supports USB2, but I'm looking to drop in a card to support USB3. Last I checked, all the on-board USB controllers on new motherboards are still somewhat dicey (crap). Does anyone here have a good recommendation as to what USB3 controller based card I should get (2 to 4 port is ok)? The goal is for direct drop-in (no fancy drivers) for Server 2008 and Win7, and the least hardware bug prone. Cost is not an issue.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
    1. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by vanDrunen · · Score: 1

      I would recommend this one with a NEC chipset (2-port version): http://www.dealextreme.com/p/2-port-usb-3-0-superspeed-pci-e-controller-card-35681 There's also a 4-port version with a VIA chipset, but I haven't tried it yet: http://www.dealextreme.com/p/high-speed-usb-3-0-4-port-pci-e-express-card-5gbps-100865

    2. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by MasterOfGoingFaster · · Score: 1

      I'm looking to increase my backup times to an external USB3 drive

      Increase time? Sounds like you need a USB 1.0 card. I assume you are paid by the hour, as those of us on salary want to decrease our backup time.

      --
      Place nail here >+
    3. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse the confused more. It's not nice.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    4. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TI makes the best. NEC (Renesas) is #2. Everything else is crap.

    5. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      I'm looking to increase my backup times to an external USB3 drive.

      I recommend buying a pair of USB<->RS-232 adapters and inserting them back-to-back between your PC and your external USB drive. That ought to do the trick. :^)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    6. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

      I'm looking to increase my backup times to an external USB3 drive. My PC only supports USB2, but I'm looking to drop in a card to support USB3. Last I checked, all the on-board USB controllers on new motherboards are still somewhat dicey (crap). Does anyone here have a good recommendation as to what USB3 controller based card I should get (2 to 4 port is ok)? The goal is for direct drop-in (no fancy drivers) for Server 2008 and Win7, and the least hardware bug prone. Cost is not an issue.

      Why are you looking to increase your backup times?

    7. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      I'm only replying because so far, I'm catching hell. Yes. I'm trying to decrease the time it takes for backups to finish. I guess I was trying to word it as increasing the transfer rate so backups finish sooner. Anyways, long day at work and all that....

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    8. Re:USB 3 controller recommendations? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not use NAS? Very few single drives will saturate 1Gbps for write loads.

  16. It's not better though by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is different, hence why Intel makes both (Thunderbolt is Intel's not Apple's). Thunderbolt is basically just an external PCIe bus. While that has a benefit of great speed and low latency, it has drawbacks. The client device has to be more complex (and thus expensive) since it needs a PCIe controller on it. Also a device can hose your system, being PCIe it has DMA and can write or read any memory.

    USB is much simpler. Slave devices need little logic to handle it. Also it is handled through the CPU which, while slower, is safer meaning an errant device can't as easily trash your system.

    1. Re:It's not better though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most USB controllers use DMA, especially at 480Mbps speed. In fact lots of peripherals use DMA and it is not generally considered a security risk. If PCIe allows DMA slave devices to autonomously select the memory that they read and write to instead of being told where, then that is a failing of PCIe. If DMA slaves don't follow commands, then that's broken hardware.

    2. Re:It's not better though by am+2k · · Score: 1

      The client device has to be more complex (and thus expensive) since it needs a PCIe controller on it. Also a device can hose your system, being PCIe it has DMA and can write or read any memory.

      Yes, just like FireWire.

    3. Re:It's not better though by Lemming+Mark · · Score: 1

      I think more systems these days have IOMMUs, which allow much better protection of DMA accesses by devices. So maybe they can properly address the DMA issue - once operating systems guys get round to it, anyhow.

    4. Re:It's not better though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, I found out the hard way last week that a failing USB cable on a webcam could totally crash a Win7 box. I have never seen Win7 freeze up before. (I did cut out the bad section of wire and fix said webcam cable -- it was pinched where it exited the product.) I suppose the blame is either rapid loading/unloading of the webcam driver, or a bug in the USB driver.

    5. Re:It's not better though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you connect two computers together and do IP over Thunderbolt? It was only on rare occasions I actually did it, but Firewire's ability to do that out of the box was really handy.

    6. Re:It's not better though by Agripa · · Score: 1

      I am going from memory on this so expect someone to correct me.

      USB uses host programmed DMA which is supported by a state machine in the host controller. Devices can only initiate transfers to or from buffers controlled by the host. It would take a poorly written or malicious driver to be a security problem.

      PCI supports actual bus mastering so PCI endpoints can pretty much do anything. An IOMMU of some type is needed to control access to main memory and some PCI bridges can control access between segments to at least a limited extent. The Thunderbolt controller acting as a PCI bridge may have some features to control access. PCIe bridge controllers would seem to be in a better position to control access but I have not dealt with them to know.

      Firewire supports programmed DMA from any endpoint but apparently a lot of Firewire host controllers lack any sort of control or the low level drivers do not support it which is almost as bad. I have heard of cases where a IOMMU or PCI bridge has been used to enforce memory security onto a Firewire controller.

    7. Re:It's not better though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IO-MMUs make the point mute. At least part of it.

  17. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Mista2 · · Score: 1

    It is if transferring an hour of 1080p video.

  18. Maximum cable length by thue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Thunderbolt is interesting because of the potential maximum cable length. The current cupper cables are limited to 3 meters, but once optical cables are available, "10s of meters" will be possible.

    Since you can run both display, keyboard and mouse over one cable natively, this means that you can put your computer with its noisy fans into the basement, use a single thunderbolt cable, and just have an extremely thin client at your workstation.

    1. Re:Maximum cable length by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Since you can run both display, keyboard and mouse over
      > one cable natively, this means that you can put your
      > computer with its noisy fans into the basement, use a single
      > thunderbolt cable, and just have an extremely thin client at
      > your workstation.

      Sounds like an Xterminal from 1988.

      I do that sort of thing with my Linux boxes all the time. I even do that sort of thing with Windows boxes already.

      I don't need a proprietary cable run. I don't need an relatively obscure bit of technology that isn't even available on an expansion card.

      I bet you there is a strong inverse relationship between those excited about Thunderbolt and those that actually have the wiring to take advantage of it.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Maximum cable length by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The major thing everyone seems to forget in this USB/Thunderbolt debate is how the interconnects work. Thunderbolt (at the core) is really a direct access channel to the CPU/Memory bus in the same way as PCI-E and it's kin. So what you really have is a dedicated external link directly to the CPU and RAM - USB has to go through all sorts of signalling changes and chipsets on it's way in and out. What I'd be interested to hear is if anyone has managed to make the interconnects work into a mesh - ie, connect all these machines directly at the bus level instead of via Ethernet, etc. Wonder if the performance of a cluster would be greatly improved or not.

      You wouldnt want to even consider trying that using USB.

    3. Re:Maximum cable length by Andor666 · · Score: 1

      No you cannot.

      You cannot plug any usb/firewire device you have on your desktop and work with it.
      You cannot i.e. send high quality video or audio propoperly in real time.
      You cannot do it on OSes that aren't running over X.

      Think , i.e. in sound or video recording studios, where the computers have to be as powerful as possible, but the place should be as silent as possible. There you have a use.

      Or, i.e., as the new displays from Apple are doing: a thunderbolt docking station:

      You just connect the thunderbolt port and you have your external monitor, external hard disks, usb devices, ethernet network... all connected in one cable. And you still have another thunderbolt port in the display for chaining another high res display.

      I'm fucked, as I have a MacBook Pro 6/9 months older than the thunderbolt technology, and I'm tired of buying apple, but the technology and the bus is here, and there are proper uses for it.

    4. Re:Maximum cable length by CMcQueeny · · Score: 1

      Exactly. These are very old ideas, but then it seems like many of the recent innovations are. Ten years ago RISC was dead, and now ARM is apparently the platform of the future. Twenty years ago the PC killed client/server computing, thin clients, etc., but now I'm confidently told that the cloud will make the PC obsolete. I'm quite willing to give these things a fair trial, but let's not act as if it's revolutionary thinking. /rant I'm not sure I get the silence use case anyway. Just throw the box in a properly-sealed cabinet. If it really needs absolute silence, we can do that with SSDs and water cooling for even the most powerful workstations. Running metres of cable just doesn't strike me as the elegant solution to this problem.

    5. Re:Maximum cable length by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget back channeling Network. Apple is basically using thunderbolt as their docking station solution via the thunderbolt display. Mind you the Thunderbolt display is expensive at $999. On the other hand, it is a 27" IPS pannel and Leveno gets about $200 for their docking stations. From that standpoint it's not all that horrible. I think it makes more sense for computer makers to ditch the bulky docking station for something like Thunderbolt.

    6. Re:Maximum cable length by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Nice, but I would rather opt for a silent computer. Who is ever going to buy a computer to put in the basement, only to put a long cable all the way up to the desk (current company excluded, of course).

    7. Re:Maximum cable length by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      That sounds like you're referring to something like Infiniband, commonly available up to 40Gbps, with latencies of a microsecond or less, and switch backplanes reaching up into the terabit range.

    8. Re:Maximum cable length by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      How so? How do you run your Linux boxes from a basement up to, say, the first floor with 1 cable? Of course you won't answer, since you can't do what your saying you can.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    9. Re:Maximum cable length by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in a studio apartment, and I would love to be able to buy the biggest, beefiest monster machine to hide away in my walk in closet along with my print server and networking equipment. Then I could put a fast RAID array in it and serve all my media from that to any device in my apartment, with a local monitor sitting out in my main room.

      Of course, not many are willing or able to see the benefit of not having a bunch of fucking cabling everywhere when they're trying to entertain guests.

    10. Re:Maximum cable length by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems HDBaseT has all the things needed to putt the computer inn the next room with one low cost cable. hope it will be available soon.
      -Uncompressed video/audio up to 10.2 Gbps.
      -Maximum cable length of 100m, including support of multiple hops, up to 8 x 100m
      -Low cost standard Cat5e/6 LAN cable
      -Utilizes a standard RJ-45 connector
      -Supplies up to 100W of power – which can be utilized to power a remote TV
      -Support for 100Mbps Ethernet
      -Easy installation utilizing existing in-wall Ethernet connectivity
      -USB support
      -Supports HDCP
      -Networking support including extended-range daisy chain and star topologies

    11. Re:Maximum cable length by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      This is the one feature that would convince me to buy in to this technology. I want to be able to stuff my PC in the garage or laundry room in between the washing machine and dryer with all the other noisy things, and keep the noise in my home office to a minimum. With a powerful enough computer (probably about the same time fiber becomes available, in 2-4 years), you should be able to set up a VM for a HTPC instance and run a separate line to your living room.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    12. Re:Maximum cable length by sjames · · Score: 1

      Not much help there. I got a new desktop recently and discovered that it produces practically no fan noise at all. Since you'd want a new machine anyway to get the new built-in port, you might as well get a quiet one. Besides that, basements are rarely a great environment for electronics.

    13. Re:Maximum cable length by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      Sounds like an Xterminal from 1988.

      I do that sort of thing with my Linux boxes all the time. I even do that sort of thing with Windows boxes already.

      Except that the X11-style of thin clients only works if the traffic generated between server and client is less than the bandwidth the LAN makes available.

      For example, your X terminal is unlikely to work very well for full-screen video playback.

      A thunderbolt-based "thin terminal", OTOH, would at all times have performance indistinguishable from a local/traditional setup.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    14. Re:Maximum cable length by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      He never actually said a single cable for multiple boxes. The implication was one cable per box, since he was replying to a statement about a single box and a single cable.

      Depending on the usage, it's relatively easy with an IP KVM. You can even move USB to the remote location if you're within range to use a traditional KVM with USB transport.

    15. Re:Maximum cable length by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      It doesn't need to.

      I can stuff the noisy stuff in a closet and run a (relatively) thin client in the location where I want to view stuff.

      I can make the entire thing a remote display or just make the storage remote. This was all being done in the 80s by Unix vendors.

      I can even run things like HDMI and USB over Cat5 if I am so inclined. Thunderbolt really doesn't offer that's much that's is genuinely new and a lot of what it is overhyped for is an entirely self inflicted limitation that a particular hardware vendor imposes upon itself.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    16. Re:Maximum cable length by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      If you aren't just a cheap bastard, then you wire your house.

      Mine has GigE and Fiber.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    17. Re:Maximum cable length by Ecuador · · Score: 1

      this means that you can put your computer with its noisy fans into the basement use a single thunderbolt cable, and just have an extremely thin client at your workstation.

      I really don't see the problem you are trying to solve. I mean, we ARE in the basement, right? Right next to our computer. Where would we put our "thin client", upstairs with mom??? Don't be ridiculous, what are we, 7 years old?
      Plus, what you are calling "computer with its noisy fans" is music to our ears and a delight to our eyes in its full LED glory, how would we admire that if we were on another floor?

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    18. Re:Maximum cable length by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      That would be awesome. Of course, by then we'll just do it wirelessly.

    19. Re:Maximum cable length by Namlak · · Score: 1

      That's not a thin client, it's a lengthy and consolidated I/O connection that happens to carry keyboard, video, mouse, sound, and probably USB data. And as such, there should be no practical limitations as there would be with a thin-client implementation, particularly where gaming or the recent UI's with enhanced graphics are concerned.

      Maybe you meant "thin client" as in a minimum of hardware at your desk without the box and cables. Then you'd be right, but using the wrong term.

      But I like the idea. Even running a centralized server rack with all the PC's needed in the house off in a (well ventilated!) closet.

    20. Re:Maximum cable length by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      If you aren't just a cheap bastard, then you wire your house.

      What part of 'studio apartment' are you incapable of comprehending?

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    21. Re:Maximum cable length by ajo_arctus · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't sound like Xterminal, and you know it doesn't. This is like being sat at your workstation, with the full-fidelity of a regular digital display cable, and zero-latency input/output, but with the workstation sat 10 meters away (maybe in an ideally cooled/sound-proofed room). That appeals to me, and I'm sure there are plenty of use cases that will crop up all over the place. It is nothing like a thin client protocol or video sender.

    22. Re:Maximum cable length by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plug in a usb camera?

    23. Re:Maximum cable length by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Yep, you're right. I mixed up his single cable per setup (1 cable for many boxes) and your plural boxes (1 cable per box). I apologize for mixing those up.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    24. Re:Maximum cable length by atisss · · Score: 1

      The true man run PCI express by cables from their basement :p

  19. usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    And apple seems to be the only place to get a Thunderbolt cable right now.

    1. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by bobjr94 · · Score: 1

      Apple loves to use cables and connectors that no one else does. As the years go by Im sure a few more devices will support TB, but it will never really get off the ground. My guess is maybe 5% of the usb market share one day.

    2. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Like display port, USB, ethernet and eSata? Apple hasn't used a proprietary connector for peripherals since they retired ADB in favor of USB.

    3. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Give it 6 months and get a TB cable from Monoprice for roughly the same price as USB3.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    4. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by TeamSPAM · · Score: 1

      I'm an Apple fanboy and I never buy accessories from them. I'd keep an eye on monoprice.com and see when they start selling them. Currently all I could find was thunderbolt to dvi/hdmi/vga. They also had a cable with mini displayport on both end for $4. I don't know if you could use that as a thunderbolt cable.

      --
      Brought to you by Team SPAM! where we believe: "Information in the noise!"
    5. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by am+2k · · Score: 2

      Apple hasn't used a proprietary connector for peripherals since they retired ADB in favor of USB.

      Except for the iPod dock connector, which replaced the FireWire plug from the first generation.

    6. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I'm sure Monster are working on a $1000 cable right now, with oxygen-free gold to polish and straighten the bits as they go through.

    7. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Microlith · · Score: 1

      Active cables probably won't ever be as cheap as passive cables. While I expect Monoprice to be cheaper, I don't foresee a Thunderbolt cable ever being as cheap, nor would I expect it, considering what's being routed over it.

    8. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thunderbolt chipsets for devices are very expensive compared to the more open usb standards.

    9. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $40? Man, that's cheap, someone at monster must've been having a good day when they made that deal!

    10. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Ah, good point there, I overlooked that.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    11. Re:usb 3.0 cables are under $5 Thunderbolt $40+ by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, lets see. You have the dock connector. You have the ADC interface from around the G3-era. You have the mess of mini-whatever ports that are technically a standard but no one uses on their laptops. Apple occasionally does non-standard things to their USB ports.

  20. Re:Slashdot (-1, wrong) by davester666 · · Score: 1

    Did you buy your UID from somebody else? Because otherwise, you would have to be hopelessly optimistic. Or unable to notice a pattern that has held true over a number of years...

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  21. No complaints from me, either way: Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because stuff's getting even FASTER than what I own now & that's good news - because next time I buy (typically once every 3-5 yrs. on new system parts)? I will get my usual 'huge speed boost', like 2-3x the former machine (per benchmarks, & yes, by "feel" in games + completion times of programs I write even)...

    APK

    P.S.=> Simply because of waiting that long between buys of computing equipment is like that, & I personally love it, lol, & it's good news to see newer/better/faster is coming along in this field, as-per-its-usual! Gotta love it...

    ... apk

    1. Re:No complaints from me, either way: Why? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2

      Oh god I agree with APK.

      I'm looking at my laptop, I see no less than 4 different ports for bidirectional data. USB, Firewire, Thunderbolt, ExpressCard/32... Ethernet if that counts would make it 5.

      There's space on motherboards everywhere for thunderbolt. Especially considering that the mini DP is free to license and use as a port, and it plays nice with DisplayPort devices... I don't see how this is a bad situation.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  22. How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by SensitiveMale · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thunderbolt was just released a few months ago. USB3 has been out for almost 2 years and it is finally starting to get a little traction in the marketplace. Something else to keep in mind is that Thunderbolt is Intel tech, not Apple. Intel is pushing Thunderbolt so Thunderbolt will be on 95% of mobos in a couple years. Since Thunderbolt is Intel tech, Microsoft will support it as well. Don't discount how much damage was done to FW by shitty MS firewire drivers that barely worked. Intel, Microsoft, and Apple will all be pushing Thunderbolt to succeed.

    One last thing, look for video card manufacturers to be pushing TB as well to get rid of DL DVI,DVI, and VGA cables.

    Thunderbolt will succeed.

    1. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, this story is silly. First, USB 3.0 is hardly used at all yet. It's not exactly obscure, but nor is it used daily by people.

      Second, Thunderbolt hasn't made its way into the chipsets yet, so of course it's not available from anyone but a custom impl (Apple).

    2. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because to not bash Apple would be WAY too difficult for the world to do. Not to mention the USB3 astroturfers.

    3. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Well, would you say that FireWire "succeeded"? Apple pushed Firewire pretty hard for about 12 years before giving up on it due to high prices and consumer apathy. There was a brief 2-4 year window when most every PC came with a FW400 port. I think that window closed in 2009. Firewire has dropped in price, but nobody ever bought in to the technology. My apple laptop came with FW400 in 2001, but it never really caught traction due to the cheaper, slower competing standard - USB 1.0 and USB 2.0. Sure, I owned two FW400 drives, but in the end, I felt like I got burnt trying to use the better/more expensive standard.
       
      HDMI + USB 3.0 is a pretty convincing set of connectors for consumers. They're largely backwards compatible and many devices have both ports on them already. It's hard to jump ship to a controversial new technology unless you don't have a problem that existing connectors can't solve.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    4. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intel pushed Wimax and Meego as well. They turned out really good, too.

      Being big does not make you succesful in every attempt you make. Economies of scale will make Thunderbolt a niche along the same lines as Firewire.

      On the technical side, I for one would not want some unknown Chinese brand to have full DMA access to my computer...

    5. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like how "DisplayPort" was meant to replace DVI/VGA/HDMI?

      If you can get manufactures to stop supporting Legacy ports then I would agree, but since we just had a brand spanking new computer from Dell delivered to work and STILL seeing VGA on the back of the damn things, I can't see it happening.

    6. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by wootest · · Score: 1

      Seems to me like arbitrary external expansion is worth it. That doesn't mean everyone will need it (or that HDMI and USB 3 aren't both great things to build in regardless), but it's just what the doctor ordered for a docking station or external enclosures. You can basically add whatever gear you'd like to, for example, a MacBook Air form factor laptop. Adding some limited, predetermined expansion has been possible before with purpose-built docking connectors and matching docks, but all this needs is the physical port and you can add what you wish.

      You could upgrade basically everything in that computer but the CPU and the RAM, and you could chain those expansions together such that you cart around a lightweight laptop up until when you get to your desk, where you plug in one plug and everything comes online. You can have a laptop when you need a laptop and a desktop when you need a desktop with few tradeoffs. That's interesting, but you're right that it's not interesting for the reasons that HDMI and USB 3 are helpful. They are complementary ideas.

    7. Re:How about giving Thunderbolt a few months first by Ster · · Score: 1

      ... Since Thunderbolt is Intel tech, Microsoft will support it as well. ...

      They already do. Thunderbolt is nothing more or less than 4-lane PCIe Gen. 2 over a wire instead of a board. Don't believe me? Ask Anand!

      (Okay, it's DisplayPort too. But they're muxed/de-muxed at the chip, so the OS doesn't know or care.)

      -Ster

  23. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by tepples · · Score: 1

    I'm still having a bit of trouble understanding the exact use case you're thinking of. Where are you getting the 1080p video and where are you putting it such that you need to transfer it far faster than real-time (0.05 Gbps or less)?

  24. Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyways by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 0

    The lack of hubs, only being able Daisy chain up to 7 devices, tied to a display port are down sides next to usb.

    Usb is good for mouses, keyboards, and other low speed input devices even printers and scanners will not get that much for faster then usb 2.0 speeds and alot of them are going network based as well.

    Now with Thunderbolt do you really want to have unplug your display to mount and unmount an ext hdd?

  25. The future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thunderbolt is a really amazing technology. With today's consumerization of computers, it becomes very dificult to upgrade devices like a macbook air. With thunderbolt, you could theoretically expand the device lifespan, with external ram upgrades, videocards and hi-speed mass-storage.

  26. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    10 GB/s vs 4.8 GBs? Those are theoretical. What really matters is practical, real life speeds, or failing that, benchmarks.

  27. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

    That's like responding to someone saying they don't want a sports car with "You would if you were in a race!"

    As much as a small segment of the population may want the faster transfer speeds of Thunderbolt, the majority will probably opt for the tried and true USB form factor and it's backward compatibility. Currently the few USB 3.0 devices I've seen have all worked with USB 2.0 as well, which is another big factor.

    It's interesting to be sure, and I will probably opt for a thunderbolt compatible motherboard on future builds in the interests of future-proofing, but I'm not going to throw my dollars behind supporting Thunderbolt devices until it becomes more ubiquitous and a LOT more 3rd party hardware vendors start supporting it.

  28. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is when you add the networking features and the power control features and the ability to run two external displays off of a laptop. As usual, the product is more than its specs. I know that's lost on most people around here.

  29. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    > It is if transferring an hour of 1080p video.

    Even USB2 will do for that. Not a big deal. There are plenty of better options available assuming I tire of the relative slowness of USB2.

    I move files around by the terabyte. In that use case, the slowness of other options becomes annoying. However, there's only so much I am willing to spend on a better solution. Also, if I blow a big wad of cash for it I will have very high expectations and be very easily disappointed.

    My non-cheap machines all have USB3. My cheap machines all have eSATA.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  30. Firewire Vs USB by MrSmith0011000100110 · · Score: 1

    This is exactly like when Firewire came out and USB was it's inferior little cousin. Apple adopted it and it was relegated to the realm of more expensive devices. I have the feeling this will happen again. SSUSB will prosper while Thunderbolt will be used almost exclusively by the people fond of a particular red fruit.. Here's the interesting part. Will the iPad/2 support Thunderbolt backward compatibility? Considering there isn't and "backward" for Thunderbolt to go, I doubt it. The industry is going to go to the easiest connection to support and if SSUSB/USB3 is fully backward compatible to USB1.0 then this is probably the last you hear of Thunderbolt if it doesn't come from an iFanboi telling you how inferior SSUSB is.

  31. Re:Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyway by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    Now with Thunderbolt do you really want to have unplug your display to mount and unmount an ext hdd?

    Why not chain the HDD off the display instead?

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  32. release the spec by jfenwick · · Score: 1

    One thing that is really holding Thunderbolt back (in my opinion) is the holding back of a Thunderbolt spec. The claim at NAB was that the SDK would come out this year, but apparently they only meant it would come out to a select group of companies making high end equipment directed at graphics specialists. I have lots of ideas for what I'd do with PCIe over displayport, but there's no way for me as an individual to get the SDK, and there's no contact person at Intel to email to even ASK how I'd get it. If it's anyone's fault the technology doesn't get adopted, it's Intel's.

  33. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uncompressed you mean? Why?

  34. Same old story by na1led · · Score: 0

    USB 2.0 vs Firewire - USB 2.0 WINS, Fiber Channel vs SAS - SAS WINS, USB 3.0 vs Thunderbolt - USB 3.0 is Winning! Can anyone see a pattern here?

    --
    -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
  35. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what you're saying is that we should stop building race cars and trucks, because a Prius is good enough for everyone?

  36. FANTASTIC! When can I get an USB dongle for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    :)

  37. Re:How Will Thurberbolt work with pci-e video card by boristdog · · Score: 1

    You can watch "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" on them?

  38. Ugh. More of this... by binary+paladin · · Score: 1

    Thunderbolt and SuperSpeed USB aren't even competing for the same market and don't have the same purpose. You will probably never have Thunderbolt mouse, keyboard, headset, printer, etc. There's no reason to use such expensive cabling and ridiculous bandwidth for devices like that.

    Docking stations, breakout boxes, external PCIe cards, displays and high speed RAID arrays are what Thunderbolt is for. A box with say... 4 ethernet adapters is good for Thunderbolt. Your webcam though? Uhhhhh, no.

  39. Re:Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    USB can also run over thunderbolt. Just plug those USB devices into your thunderbolt monitor. Now your daisy chaining 7 thunderbolt devices, plus a usb hub with 200+ devices on a single cable to your laptop.

  40. Drivers... by jythie · · Score: 1

    I imagine much of this will be decided by how difficult it is to program for. One of the things that ended up keeping USB back from some of the higher end uses (like external video cards) was how huge of a pain it was to program for... at my previous company I always heard grumbling from the USB programmers.... if Thunderbolt is layed out better for these types of devices then, even if it *gasp* costs a whole $1 per port then it might have a place.

    1. Re:Drivers... by cnettel · · Score: 1

      Considering that the data part of Thunderbolt is basically a different physical layer for PCIe, it should be very simple to handle. I guess, though, that it will be quite possible to do Really Stupid Stuff where the added latency compared to a motherboard PCIe board is enough to cause trouble. On the other hand, the latency is positively fantastic compared to what you can achieve with USB.

  41. Re:Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not chain the HDD off the display instead?

    Because then you have to unmount you HDD to unplug your external display.

    And if you can't think of any reason why you would want to turn off your display, just imagine plugging two external HDDs, one will always be immobilized.

  42. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by bobjr94 · · Score: 1

    Since either are faster than ssd or hdd speeds, it does not really matter, your bottleneck is your drive and sata connecters. I dont see paying extra for something that will not work with any devices I have, or will have to pay an extra premium for later.

  43. I dont want to buy new devices... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the difference in speed, I would rather keep the backward compatibility with older USB devices rather than buying all new devices to accommodate a new port... Especially if the other port is favorited by apple...

  44. the display needs to be thunderboth for that to wo by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    the display needs to be thunderbolt for that to work but a Display port display can be at the end of chain.

  45. Re:Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyway by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected. I was under the impression that the new 27" Apple Displays had two Thunderbolt ports for daisy-chaining to another display. Guess not. Bummer.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  46. Re:How Will Thurberbolt work with pci-e video card by king_nebuchadnezzar · · Score: 1

    Perhaps you can have the TB controller on the video card, you then have all you need, the video, and the PCIe. and Bingo.

  47. I think Thunderbolt main strong point is light by kandresen · · Score: 1

    instead of signals transmitted using electricity. That essentially remove surges between your equipment from the equation. I have no longer any count of how many times I have experienced small shocks from connecting an external hard drive with its own power cord to my laptop or desktop. That may not stop, but I will at least know this no longer impact my machine. On the other side - I am not going to run for Thunderbolt until I know the failure rate of fiber cables due to bending etc. vs current USB cables... Especially if the price for new cables is substantially more expensive.

  48. Doesn't really "work" by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    true, but there is 1 crucial factor. When you plug a SuperSpeed device into an existing port, it still works.>

    Lets be clear here - the only super speed devices we'll see really are storage devices.

    In that case the devices do not really "work". Yes you'll be able to get to files on them in a pinch, but they will not be usable for the reason you got the external super-speed storage for in the fast place - either large image or video editing. The thing will be dog slow and basically unusable.

    It's the same way a modern car will "work" when it goes into emergency lockdown limp mode and proceeds at no more than 10MPH. Yes it is "working" but what good is that really?

    I have an external USB 3.0 case but there's really no point in ever connecting it via slow USB.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Doesn't really "work" by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Lets be clear here - the only super speed devices we'll see really are storage devices.

      No. There are a few USB 3 cameras. Machine vision cameras already push FW800 and GIG-e about as far as it goes (i.e. 800 MBit/s and 1GBit/s). The alternative currently is Camera-Link which can be nearly as expensive as the camera and requires extra poor quality venduh drivers, as opposed to FW 800 which "just works". There are already a few machine vision cameras creeping in with USB3.

      Though, I seriously hope that FW1600 and 3200 get going since they are FW400 and 800 have proven so much more reliable than USB for this kind of thing.

      In that case the devices do not really "work".

      That's an interesting definition on "not work". At the moment, most big disks are USB2 and take bloody ages to do anything, which is annoying but normal. Occasionally, they go nice and fast (if you have a USB3 disk and USB3 equipped computer), but most of the time the USB3 disk will be normal (i.e. slow). As opposed to the thunderbolt one which simply won't work.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:Doesn't really "work" by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Ahh yes, so if you define "working" in a very specific way, you can then claim that "working with diminished capacity" is effectively the same thing as "doesn't work at all."

      Interesting how you fanbois think.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    3. Re:Doesn't really "work" by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      I've seen a total of three Thunderbolt products now. A four-drive storage enclosure, a monitor (Not just displayport - it also includes port expansion capabilities) and a high-definition capture box. The capture box is nice though - not just 1080p (Analog or digital inputs) but supporting 3D video as well (digital only).

      It's hard to think of much that could need the sheer capacity even USB3 offers though. No hard drive could saturate it. Maybe future drives will. The only uses I can see are driving multible displays (Great for videowalls and such - daisy the displays, no need to have eight video cards in one PC) and esoteric things like scientific instruments, timelapse cameras or high-speed logic analysers.

    4. Re:Doesn't really "work" by smash · · Score: 1

      USB latency is shithouse though.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    5. Re:Doesn't really "work" by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      That's what Firewire is for.

    6. Re:Doesn't really "work" by Creepy · · Score: 1

      IMO, Thunderbolt is mainly Intel attempting to replace PCI express - it has bi-directional 10Gbps throughput with a potential of 100Gbps, which is faster than current PCI express 2.0 16x slots (but it looks like it will be slower than the upcoming PCIe 3.0). Intel is a member of the PCI-SIG, but they don't own the technology - it is owned by a 900+ member non-profit, I believe.

      As for USB 3.0, no _single_ drive can saturate it, but a striped RAID array can easily saturate it, which is why in demos of thunderbolt Intel saturated a striped RAID array while showing full video to show that the video didn't slow down and the files were transferred. Intel also says not to expect more than about 3.2Gbps throughput for USB 3.0, and that is about what fast SSDs can handle (I've seen SSDs with read/write over 500MB/sec, but the fastest platter HDDs were about 250MB/sec last time I checked [at least a year ago, but I don't think the tech has advanced much] and they would need to be 400MB/sec to saturate 3.2Gbps - note for the less technical that I use b for bits and B for bytes, as is proper, where 8 bits=1 byte).

  49. Multiple displays by vw_bob · · Score: 1

    Since Thunderbolt can be used to drive displays, I personally want it just so I can daisy chain two large displays off from one Macbook Pro. If it also means that I can plug peripherals into the monotor or onto the end of the chain, well that's just an added bonus. This is the one new feature on that has actually made me really want to upgrade sooner rather than later.

  50. Long live USB! by CMcQueeny · · Score: 1

    Apple often has a knack for promoting superior-but-niche technologies, and probably this is no different. But can we please let at least the USB connector design take its place alongside RJ-45/11 as things we don't screw around with? Personally I still miss the durable and reliable DB connectors, but that's a lost cause. Let video satisfy our need for connection anarchy *looks at the four incompatible video connectors on this PCs*.

  51. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's probably capturing it on his high end Canon or Nikon dSLR. He'd be in worse shape if he were using a Red.

    When you have a client waiting, time is money. Video production companies will pay for speed. Thunderbolt would be a nifty interface for connecting to his SAN.

  52. 640K is enough for everyone by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

    "....that while Thunderbolt may offer twice the bandwidth of SuperSpeed USB, most people simply won't need it..."
    Then MB drives were enough.
    Then GB drives were enough.
    Now TB drives are enough.

    1 GB RAM was enough.
    Then 2 GB RAM was enough.
    ,
    .
    .
    See were I'm going?

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    1. Re:640K is enough for everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See were I'm going?

      Hmmm, let me guess. You're saying there will be let'ssay--USB4.0 somewhere in the future, right? Along with let'ssay-Thunderbolt2.0?

    2. Re:640K is enough for everyone by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Ha ha. Since I can't tell if you missed it or not, or just joking, it the statement that "people won't need it." Whereas, people eventually always need it.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  53. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

    Of course not, but if you wanted to make something that appealed to the largest market possible, you probably would. Unfortunately, when a 3rd party manufacturer has to decide which connectivity option they want to use with their device, I'll bet you any amount of money they're going to pick the one with the largest market share regardless of capabilities.

    Niche developers making niche products will do nothing for widespread adoption of the standard, just look at Firewire.

  54. This it too funny. by trum4n · · Score: 1

    Just about every post is rated (-2, wrong). This makes me smile.

  55. TB for the win! by guruevi · · Score: 1

    The thing with USB3 is that nobody needs it. USB2 is plenty fast for just about anything you want to connect over USB (external hard drives, usb sticks and keyboard/mouse). For everything else it plain sucks, you need a hub and the latency is horrible and the toll on the CPU for high data transfers is horrible so you're not guaranteed a certain speed. And it's not future-proof with a single 6Gb line where 10Gb has been in data centers for years now as an interconnect for fast data.

    Thunderbird is what USB3 should've been - an extension of the PCIe bus directly on the CPU. Sure it's not widely implemented yet but it's pretty darn cool what the possibilities are even in the datacenter (for compute clusters)

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  56. Thunderbolt is really fast, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...security is still an issue, just like Firewire. USB is safer (and slower, even at the same data rate) because it doesn't use the DMA model which allows devices full read/write access to your PCs memory. An firmware bug on a device plugged into your computer could cause system instability, and in theory you could create a device for DMA attacking a machine and stealing data. There are workarounds in some newer CPUs using virtualization instructions, so maybe we'll see Microsoft support it like they do USB someday.

    Also it's more expensive, unpopular (mentioned in TFA), and USB 3.0 will already more than cover nearly every serial data transfer use case for nearly all people.

  57. 2160p by tepples · · Score: 1

    Another anonymous post clued me in: Somebody working in video production might be trying to get lossless or otherwise intraframe-only video out of camcorders and into editing equipment. At the highest professional level, this isn't 2K (1080p); this is 4K (2160p).

  58. All of this has happened before, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all of this will happen again.

    RS-232 vs IEEE-1284
    SCSI vs IDE
    VLB vs PCI
    OHCI vs UHCI
    Firewire vs. USB
    USB2 vs eSata
    USB3 vs Thunderbolt...

    Of course the firewire vs USB comparison is the most direct here. Does Thunderbolt really make sense for all things, since the cost and complexity of the thuinderbolt components is significantly higher than that of USB?
    I don't really know what Thunderbolt is trying to be. seems like we have it all already.... USB3 + eSata + HDMI
    But then again Thurderbolt might make alot more sense when 4K displays and 4K media start becomming popular.

    1. Re:All of this has happened before, and... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      It happened in networking too, with faster and faster ethernet being good enough, and cheap.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  59. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by fnj · · Score: 1

    1080p video is far from 0.05 Gbps. 1080p/60 as transmitted over HDMI1.0 to 1.2 is 3.96 Gbps. HDMI 1.3 with deep color goes up to 10.2 Gbps (hmmm ... the same as Thunderbolt ... not surprising considering that is one of the interconnects that Thunderbolt is supposed to be able to do).

    If you mean a compressed data stream encoding a 1080p video content, as transmitted over the air or via satellite or cable, that is much lower; somewhere under 20 Mbps. However, an hour of 720p or 1080i HD content, even compressed to hell using H.264, is somewhere around 1 GB. I know I sure spend a lot of time twiddling my thumbs slinging those files over either gigabit ethernet or USB 2.0 as I have to do presently. The difference between 4.8 Gbps and 10.2 Gbps for transferring an hour of 1080p is something like 2 minutes vs 1 minute. Sounds worthwhile to me, if I have, say 100 or 1000 hours of 1080p to transfer.

  60. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Hadlock · · Score: 1

    Here we are in 2011, the digital camera revolution is over and everyone (and their mother!) owns a digital camera, most of which will do 720p, the rest will do 640x480, even the crapy vivitar walmart ones for $20. It's difficult to find a cell phone or MP3 player that doesn't record video these days. I was part of a very technology/photography oriented group of friends growing up, and now many of us are starting families. Not once has any of them said "gosh, I am spending too much time transferring all this raw footage!". The great thing about pictures is that no post-processing is needed and can be shared instantly on facebook. Video is time consuming and only 2-3 people ever watch your home videos. "Consumer HD video" is the "video phone" technology of our generation. Everybody has access to it, but nobody actually wants to use it. You have a few amateur die-hards who actually put their products through their paces, but the vast majority of people will probably record 6-8 hours of memorable video throughout their child's life.
     
    Sure, your new display technology can stream 2048p video at 4x realtime speed, but the use for that feature to the average consumer is vanishingly small. Daisy-chaining expensive prehiprials to a single port is a neat feature, but by generation 3 or 4 (think usb, firewire) you end up with 4-6 ports on the back, and another 2 on the front. The fact that the cable is limited to 3m doesn't help.
     
    This would be neat if they released the fiber version, and I could keep my PC in the closet in the basement, far away from my mouse, keyboard, and two silent monitors. But instead we're tethered within 8 feet of the big PC box yet again.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
  61. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *sigh*
    I cant believe i have to say this...
    Video Production, video editing, etc.

    Something other than starcraft & WoW.

  62. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by tepples · · Score: 1

    1080p video is far from 0.05 Gbps.

    I was guessing based on the maximum bit rate of Blu-ray Disc video.

    1080p/60

    Feature films on BD are 1080p/24. As I understand it, feature-length motion pictures aren't produced in high motion because theaters aren't set up to show high motion. Pretty much the only thing that needs high motion is sports and perhaps overcranked effect shots that will be slowed down before playback.

    3.96 Gbps

    You have a point about uncompressed video, as might be used in video production. But how big would the RAID 10 array for saturating a 10 Gbps link need to be?

    However, an hour of 720p or 1080i HD content, even compressed to hell using H.264, is somewhere around 1 GB. I know I sure spend a lot of time twiddling my thumbs slinging those files over either gigabit ethernet or USB 2.0 as I have to do presently.

    Wouldn't a two-hour movie compressed to 2 GB (16 Gbit; 2.2 Mbps) take under twenty seconds to copy over a 1 Gbps link? Even assuming a slightly more generous 6 GB and 6.6 Mbps, it's still one minute to copy something that will take two hours to watch.

    Sounds worthwhile to me, if I have, say 100 or 1000 hours of 1080p to transfer.

    Apart from professional video production, where would one get these hundreds of hours of 1080p video?

  63. Re:Slashdot (-1, wrong) by Fjandr · · Score: 1

    There are lots of hopelessly optimistic people on /. with lower UIDs. :)

    Note, I'm not one of them.

  64. Re:Thunderbolt is to limmted to replace USB anyway by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    Why not chain the HDD off the display instead?

    As long as the device you want to remove is at the end of the chain, you're golden. However, as the chain gets longer, the chances of the device you want to remove being the device at the end of the chain diminish.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  65. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Rakishi · · Score: 2

    Except the camcorder isn't likely to store the data on anything that can actually saturate either usb3 or thunderbolt so the use case is meaningless. So basically thunderbolt would be a useless interface for connecting to his SAN.

  66. Terrible and poorly researched article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article is very poorly researched and full of incorrect statements.

  67. Get a clue, Slashdot. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    I have a hard time believing that people on Slashdot are actually calling it "SuperSpeed" USB, instead of just 3.0.

    Seems to me, most Slashdotters should be aware that today's "SuperSpeed" is tomorrow's snail crawl. Open mouth, remove foot, please.

    1. Re:Get a clue, Slashdot. by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      In their defense, you're talking about a standard where Full Speed is lower than Hi Speed and nobody's legally permitted to call them 1.1 or 2.0.

    2. Re:Get a clue, Slashdot. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      You make a good point. But for something that's "illegal", people actually do it all the time. I see products advertised all over the place claiming compatibility with "USB 2.0", while I have never, even once, seen a product advertised as "Hi Speed" USB.

  68. Thunderbolt has 4 lanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the Thunderbolt wikipedia page:

    "When connected to a Thunderbolt device the per-lane data rate becomes 10 Gbit/s and the 4 lanes are configured as 2 channels with each bidirectional 10 Gbit/s channel comprising one lane of input and one lane of output."

    What people forget is that Thunderbolt can have one channel reading at 10 Gbit/s and writing at 10 Gbit/s simultaneously. At the same time the same Thunderbolt cable can have a second channel also reading 10 at Gbit/s and writing 10 at Gbit/s. USB 3.0 only has one channel and it's 5Gbit/s is shared by reads and writes.

  69. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Muerte2 · · Score: 1

    Sure I spend of lot of time twiddling my thumbs waiting for my files to transfer too, but the bottleneck isn't my 1Gb/s network. It's my slow sata drive! I would venture a guess that if you were able to fully utilize that 10Gb/s connection thunderbolt gives you, you'll be entirely limited by what's on either end. Only high end SAS arrays will be able to write/read that fast.

    In other words the only way to utilize all that bandwidth would be to aggregate 100s of connections, ala an ethernet switch. Which is an entirely DIFFERENT market than what they're targeting for thunderbolt.

  70. Silly comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's like saying, "To date, Airbus has sold only 230 A380 jetliners, while Ford has sold over six million Focus automobiles during the same period. Given that the Airbus costs ten thousand times as much as the Ford, and can only be operated by a limited number of specially trained and certified pilots, does Airbus really have a chance at competing with Ford in the transportation market?"

    Thunderbolt is an expansion bus, like PCI or AGP.
    USB is still USB.

    There is a slight overlap (namely, storage devices) but in general, they are not even in the same category.

  71. Can the summary get any more facts incorrect? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

    Aside from the spec sheet factoids that we all already knew, I see nothing else that's factually correct in that summary. Let's go through the rest of it:

    To date, however, Apple is the only systems manufacturer to adopt Thunderbolt

    Incorrect. Sony shipped the Vaio Z21 earlier this year with Thunderbolt, though it was branded under the old codename of Light Peak.

    and it has done so as an additional device connectivity port

    Incorrect. It's replacing mini-DisplayPort with Thunderbolt on the models that are being updated since they share the same connector. Doing so means no additional ports. Instead, since Thunderbolt can support different protocols, people who have DisplayPort devices can continue to use them without issue, and they'll have Thunderbolt there for later when more peripherals arrive.

    keeping SuperSpeed USB on its computers.

    Apple doesn't have SuperSpeed USB on any of its computers. They never have. The MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, iMac, and Mac mini have all been updated with Thunderbolt, yet they're all still using USB 2.0. The Mac Pro is their only computer which hasn't been updated since Thunderbolt debuted, and it certainly doesn't have USB 3.0 either. In fact, Apple is the only major holdout on USB 3.0. It even says so at the end of the introduction on Wikipedia's USB 3.0 page.

    No other systems manufacturer has committed to Thunderbolt.

    Besides Sony, which I've already mentioned, both Acer and Asus have committed to having Thunderbolt devices out in the future.

    In contrast, SuperSpeed USB has been installed on 10 billion pieces of hardware, with numbers continuing to grow.

    Incorrect, and entirely inane. Of course the numbers continue to grow. Was there a concern that they'd be shrinking? And 10 billion is patently false. The best numbers I could find in a quick search were that only 14M USB 3.0 devices were sold in 2010 (so you're only off by three orders of magnitude), and that projections by analysts peg sales at 1.7B per year by 2014.

    1. Re:Can the summary get any more facts incorrect? by cyrano.mac · · Score: 1

      The article is wrong about power too. First it states "SuperSpeed USB is optimized for power efficiency. It uses only 1.5 amps of power for charging devices, or about one-third of the power of its predecessor Hi-Speed USB (v2.0).", and in the following paragraph just the opposite ""We also deliver more power for faster charging". USB3 is 1.5 amps, or THREE TiMES the 0.5 amps of USB2. Real shoddy journalism. Or is that paid for propaganda?

  72. Article is incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thunderbolt is on some Sony notebooks... and has been for awhile... of course unless Apple has it, no one has any idea.

  73. There are 2 big problems in this article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Intel's tech is not called Thunderbolt, it's Lightpeak. Thunderbolt is a trademark owned by apple and the only products we'll ever see using the thunderbolt name are apple products.

    2) Said that, Lightpeak, not Thunderbolt, is already being used by other manufacturers as well. My favorite example is the newest sony Vaio Z computer: It can use lightpeak not only for a external display, but also increase graphical processing power with an external GPU.
    Sony is probably the only manufacturer in the world right now using Lightpeak for something useful and that couldn't be done before and yet they (and intel) are letting apple take all the credit for a freaking mini-display port. Now that is what I call awful marketing.

    http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/29/sony-vaio-z-review-2011/

    1. Re:There are 2 big problems in this article by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      Intel's codename for it was Light Peak, but just checking Wikipedia's page for Thunderbolt will confirm that Intel owns the registrations on the trademark for Thunderbolt, and they've switched to calling it Thunderbolt in all of their marketing material as of several months ago.

  74. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, the question was Where are you getting the 1080p video and where are you putting it such that you need to transfer it far faster than real-time, to which I replied. The use case certainly is not meaningless, or at least it's so narrow as to be pointless: downloading stuff from the camera is the least interesting part of the process. The transfer issue rears its ugly head when you need to start doing something with the relatively uncompressed data. The issue at that point is much less about the video recording device than it is about moving rather an awful lot of already downloaded video to and fro. There all the speed you can get is plus, as is often Fibre Channel to your SAN (perhaps USB Fibre Channel adapters exist, although I've never heard of one).

    Additionally, the option to connect a PCI expansion chassis through a Thunderbolt port is convenient -- even if you're generally using a monster tower to do your editing.

    And to be clear: there's a lot of overlap between the potential markets for Thunderbolt and USB3, but the overlap isn't perfect. Thunderbolt is not intended as a mass market alternative to USB, and I've seen relatively little evidence that USB is getting much consideration as a very high end interface between Very Expensive Things. I could draw a Venn diagram of my perception of the relationship if you think it would be helpful, although I doubt Slashdot would allow that much ASCII art.

  75. Re:How Will Thurberbolt work with pci-e video card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two connectors modern video cars use up a second PCI Slot for the cooling system. There is no reason why that space can't be used for a channel thunder bolt through.

  76. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Irrelevant. The next generation of USB (4) and ethernet (10Gbps) will easily rival that providing enough bandwidth the furnish most consumer display devices. Intel is simply trying to pre-empt those and steal their thunder. With each protocol competing for bandwidth I doubt the thunderbolt will provide enough for this generation. I can assure you that in the future high speed USB, SATA and network would rather be competing for PCIe bandwidth than for thunderbolt bandwidth.

  77. What is "SuperSpeed" USB? Never heard of it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that supposed to be USB3.0? I have USB3.0, it took a few years before it finally got integrated into MicroATX motherboards, but I finally was able to upgrade this year to one that has it. I did not see a single motherboard with Thunderbolt available.

    Oddly enough, I have had a USB3.0 external drive for longer than USB3.0 motherboards have been available. The performance difference is not that great though, it only averages around 50MB/s.

  78. Speed "fanboi"? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Ahh yes, so if you define "working" in a very specific way

    A specific way for a specific need - high speed disk use.

    Lots of people don't need high speed disks, and they would be fine with a standard USB drive. I use them myself for some things where speed is not needed.

    People who actually by USB 3.0 storage devices are very likely to buy them exactly because of the speed. So then when they operate at a greatly reduced speed, they are not usable for the reason you bought them.

    Think of it this way - if you buy a USB 3.0 drive and no matter what you do, it works at USB 2.0 speeds - would you keep or return it? Even though it's "working" according to YOUR definition.

    The use of "fanboi" has jumped the shark when people accuse you of being a "fanboi" just because you want to use a technology for what it was meant to do!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Speed "fanboi"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hell's with your logic?

      What do you mean "no matter what, it works at USB 2.0 speed", are you buying USB3.0 drive without USB3.0 controller?

      See, it works _fast_ at your PC, where you need it _fast_, and it just _works_ with almost every computing device when you go out with your drive.

      By same logic USB2.0 doesn't work, because I stuck a flash drive in my old P-166 and it now goes at 12Mbit/s.

  79. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Bengie · · Score: 1

    Benchmarks of TB with both single and multiple streams showed it doing 10Gb/sec effective, both ways at the same time. That 10gb/sec *doesn't* include overhead. (20Gb/sec combined)

    So, assuming maximum frame size, you will see an aggregate payload bandwidth of 10Gb/sec per direction.

    Also, for other posts, TB isn't PCIe, it tunnels the PCIe protocol over it. PCIe slots are both a layer1 and layer2, but TB has its own layer 1 protocol, but implements the PCIe layer 2 protocol.

  80. Re:TB for the win! = completely wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do not know what you are talking about.

    External hard disks is a very good example of a place where USB3 is a huge advantage over USB2. USB2 is slower than even a 5400rpm laptop drive. USB3 is fast enough to run an SSD.

    I recently bought a USB3 card reader. I use a DSLR and shoot large RAW files. It's not uncommon for me to come back from a shoot with 8+GB of images. I want to transfer those to disk as quickly as I can so I can get to work on them. I use high speed CF cards and I stage them to an SSD. The USB2 card readers are a pain when transferring that much data. USB3 makes the process quick and easy. As far as I know, there is no Thunderbolt card reader yet, and I don't have a machine with a Thunderbolt socket; but I have three PCs with USB3, and the USB3 card reader cost me $26.

  81. Re:Cheap fast and good enough beats state of the a by Bengie · · Score: 1

    One of the reasons for Lightpeak was that USB is about at its max speed. It may have a few revisions left, but from what I've read, USB won't be able to get much further without breaking backwards compatibility. Once you lose backwards compatibility, you lose its greatest advantage. Or even if it does keep it, USB will have to trade some benefit for backwards compatibility, as nothing is "free".

    Once you level the playing field by saying neither USB4 nor TB work with USB1-3, then which one do you choose? I'd say it's a choice weighted combination of versatility, cost, and performance. As it sits right now, TB is the underdog because of it's lack of install base and not much can make full use of it.. yet.. but if it is true that USB won't scale much further without breaking its greatest asset, then which will take over?

    Also, lightpeak is meant to replace PCIe physical interfaces for Intel. We may start to see motherboards with no slots, but a cluster of fiber ports, then you just mount your cards(video/network/raid/etc) in the chassis. If intel pushes for this style, we may eventually see lightpeak in every computer anyway, then it's not a question of either/or. I'm sure we'll see both ports as fab processes will push the cost down to almost free in no time.

    We'll have the BluRay vs HD-DVD for USB vs TB soon enough, except it'll be affordable and fairly convenient to own both, unlike two expensive optical disc formats.

    Again, I'm not sure if it's true, so only time will tell.