Microsoft Thinks USB-C Isn't Ready For the Mainstream (digitaltrends.com)
When Microsoft unveiled the Surface Laptop last week, it left many customers and members of the press scratching their heads over its lack of a USB Type-C port. According to general manager of Surface Engineering, Pete Kyriacou, Microsoft seems to think that the technology isn't ready for the mainstream. Digital Trends reports: Microsoft does not want customers to deal with the various Type-C cables, underwhelming chargers, all the adapters, and the third-party Type-C docks. That is why the Surface Laptop features only one USB 3.1 Gen1 Type-A port, one headphone jack, one Mini DisplayPort connector, and the Surface Connect port. Simplicity. That latter connection is how customers can "safely" expand their Surface device experience. Microsoft's $200 Microsoft Surface Dock adds two Mini DisplayPort connectors, one gigabit Ethernet port, four USB 3.1 Gen1 Type-A ports, and one audio out port. The dock connects to a compatible Surface device via Microsoft's proprietary Surface Connect port. Right now, it works with the Surface Pro 3, Surface Pro 4, and Surface Book but the Surface Laptop will undoubtedly be added soon. While limiting a Surface device's connectivity seems like forcing customers into purchasing the dock, Microsoft sees this setup as brand stability. Customers won't get ticked at Microsoft because they are confused about the different types of cables, chargers, and so on. Microsoft is controlling the end-to-end experience and there is nothing wrong with that.
Microsoft has good judgement
Third party type-C is a mess. I wish USB would start pulling licenses and going after trademark infringement on the bad chargers and fake cables.
I have zero issue with my nexus devices and my MacBook - both use USB-C and I have yet to find a cable or device that doesn't perform as intended on any of the devices.
The various flavors of USB are enough to drive someone to drink. USB-C is a welcome change that actually fulfills the promise of the word "Universal" in USB.
I think Microsoft is just chickening out here.
Apple is dropping everything and only offers USB-C while Microsoft includes almost everything except USB-C.
It's like both companies don't want to have transition periods between the present and the future.
At least Microsoft isn't braindead and is keeping the traditional headphone jack. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
#DeleteFacebook
They installed 5 generation ago USB technology because the new thunderbolt / USB-C would have added too much to the base model and then did not add it to the others for a consistent story (IMHO.
No one cares what Microsoft "wants" or "thinks" anymore
Given the mess that has been made of USB-C Microsoft's approach may be appropriate. USB-C appears to have spawned a lot cases of frustration due, I believe, to unanticipated permutations of phys, cables and chargers, and some cases of damage due to low quality components plaguing the market. Perhaps it's best to stick with "just works" and leave the problematic stuff on the shelf.
Right now the market place for USB C is awful(filled with cheap crap that doesn't actually fulfill the USB C specs) and other than those of us who bought new computers in the last year, nobody has a USB C port on their PC or device. Thus no cable, no power adapter or anything else.
Maybe next year it will be worth while, but this year, it simply isn't.
My new laptop at work (ZBook 15 G3) has USB-C. It's everything USB should have been since the beginning.
Reversible, Just Works(Tm). It'll drive 2 4k external TVs.
Laptop itself has Ethernet, VGA, 3xUSB3.0 and 2xUSB-C ports. Holds 64GB of RAM, 2xM.2 NVMe drives and 1x 2.5" drive.
The dock could still use some work. You shouldn't have to issue a white paper on how to hook up monitors (Which is still wrong, the HDMI port drives 4k just fine.).
If I *need* to do some GPU work I can plug in an external GPU. Or gigabit ethernet or any other PCIe device.
Microsoft screwed up on this one. They're releasing old hardware. I bet they could have easily charged a surface on over USB Power Delivery. It's taken us a while but USB-C is pretty damn good as far as a physical connection. And Thunderbolt 3 is equally as good of a protocol.
For most people if the 'desktop is dead' it's because USB-C/TB killed it. I just want to plug my laptop into cluster of CPUs when I'm at my desk.
have to give the devil his due
I'm sure most users prefer the proprietary "Surface Connect" port over USB-C.
USB C is, finally, USB done right. The connector is small, which is good for small devices; there is only one connector (no A and B variants); since there's only one connector you don't need a huge variety of cables (just USB A to USB C plus USB C to USB C and you are covered for 99.9% of scenarios); the plug doesn't have a "top" or "bottom", it just plugs in; and it was even designed to deliver useful amounts of power (enough to charge a small laptop).
My phone and my wife's phone are USB C and I just bought a Samsung Chromebook Plus, which charges by USB C (and it has two USB C ports, making it better than the Apple netbook). I'm planning to ask my employer to give me a laptop with USB C ports. I'm just waiting for a compact camera that uses USB C for charging and data and I'll buy that too. If I can manage it I won't buy another gadget with Micro USB or Mini USB ever again.
So congratulations, Microsoft! You managed to give me yet another reason to not buy your mobile devices!
P.S. I'm waiting for someone to make a kit that includes two or three USB C cables (USB C on both ends) plus a bunch of adapters: USB C to USB A, USB C to Mini USB, USB C to Micro USB, USB C to USB B, USB C to Ethernet jack, etc. Plus a USB to serial and USB to parallel and USB to IDE and SATA. It would be one kit that would let you connect almost anything to your laptop.
lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
I am a big fan of USB C. I searched high and low for a laptop that charges over USB C and meets my other requirements. I found one. I use a Pixel XL. Both these devices charge over higher voltages (5-9V for the pixel, 12-20V for the laptop) using USB Power Delivery. It was supposed to be Utopia. Instead, I've had to dig through spreadsheets, comb through reviews, and still haven't been able to find everything I'm looking for in terms of USB C accessories. Yes, one day everyone will catch up. A surface pro would help it along. But I can't blame them for waiting. They're right.
Error 404 - Sig Not Found
The Surface isn't even mainstream itself. Have you ever seen a Surface outside of the NFL sidelines? They aren't selling.
In 3 years it's gonna be USB-D with a slightly different shape. Then, all your stuff needs to be replaced at the same time.
Microsoft is the same company that almost missed the Internet for Windows. When The Road Ahead by Bill Gates came out, it had no mentioned of the Internet. Gates and the publisher revised the book. You can't have a visionary missing one of the biggest technological developments of his time.
Microsoft is controlling the end-to-end experience
Because fuck what you want, this is all about what Microsoft wants.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
This almost never happens, but for once I agree with Microsoft here, even though I believe their real justification has something to do with sticking it to Apple.
Is it a licensing issue? Are the royalties excessive?
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
"Surface device experience"
Who the hell writes like that, other than marketing folk, of which you would expect the author of TFA to be??
Either have a dedicated power cable or figure out how to prevent low powered USB C ports from being fried if you plug in the wrong cable. Until they solve that problem, it isn't ready for the mainstream. The ports should be smart enough to not take the full voltage. I've already seen a few folks fry their expensive phones by plugging in the wrong USB C cable.
that's what I think about the Windows 10 OS. And MS is worried about one lousy connector hurting the computing experience? Try a FU'd up OS like windows 10.
MS is such a FU'd company, lead by a FU'd CEO, FUing up the world.
This coming from the company that labeled their Windows 95 CD's with "with USB support". Why not support it. Is it mainstream? probably not. Is it in use, yes. My Nexus device charges through my HP laptop with a USB C connection. My HP Envy offers me options with my USB ports. Why not provide the consumer with a choice?
Sent from my TARDIS
I bought a nice laptop with a USB-C port replicator. Didn't work worth a damn under Windows 10 (kept disconnecting-reconnecting every few seconds).
Installed Fedora and it has worked perfectly ever since.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
There's a real reason USB 3 can be a problem.
Don't we all remember this?
https://plus.google.com/+BensonLeung/posts/LH4PPgVrKVN
https://www.reddit.com/r/Nexus6P/comments/3robzo/google_spreadsheet_for_usbc_cables_with_benson/
Kriston
We will get there eventually.
How about having a reasonable number of USBX ports?
Every computer should have at least 4 imho.
Sure I could use a hub but that's not the point.
Minimum threshold fixed. Thanks!
I'm not sure if the excuse works as the connector is going for almost every new smartphone/tablet/laptop released these days, but I have to agree with Microsoft (even though I think the Windows 10 S is an incredibly stupid idea) on this one.
USB Implementers Forum not only failed all my expectations, they managed to make me see USB Type C as worse than regular USB. It had the potential to fix all the problems of USB and make it even better, but somehow they managed to make it worse.
Ok, the connector is smaller, more robust and reversible. Which is something, I guess. But they didn't address almost anything worthwhile other than those. Compatibility standards are still loose (stuff like MHL, USB OtG and others are still obscured when not outright hidden from costumers), then came all the problems with defective cables, the mix up with yet another interface (Thunderbolt 3) using the same connector, more confusion for the average user... it's such a shame.
The worst part is that the increase in power on this flabby standard has real potential to cause circuit damages and fires, which is pretty much unacceptable. Hard to imagine how a forum like that with so much money invested could get things so wrong.
Microsoft Isn't Ready For the Mainstream
Meanwhile they are ok with their OEM chargers that are still using Type-A usb port with a Type-A to Type-C usb cable.
What happened to slashdot?
USB-C is not as robust as USB-A. For a device that is expected to be replaced every year like a "smart" phone, USB-C is ok. For devices expected to last longer such as a laptop, USB-A is a better choice.
That is utterly stupid and backwards. For something that will just be around in a year, USB-A would be OK because that's still well supported.
But for something you plan to use for any length of time, more and more advanced stuff will come out primarily for USB-C. I would not buy a laptop I planed to use longer than two years at this point if it did not support USB-A.
Plus using USB-A ports greatly reduces the need for adapters or adapter cables.
Actually not the case already. I was looking for a decent small external case for an HD and the bets one I found was - USB-C!! I needed to buy an adaptor to use that with the USB-A on my laptop... When you buy a USB-C device you buy a small dock converter for a number of ports and then you are done, along with converting a few key things (like USB readers) to USB-C versions. Then you use them forever after because going forward USB-A is absolutely going to take over the USB world in short order.
This whole marketing idea that thinner is better is BULLSHIT!!
That's why marketing doesn't use that notion for any ad I've ever seen.
No, the very REAL advantage of USB-A is quite simple - you can plug it in either way. AT LAST the rest of the world gets to enjoy Lightning like simplicity in USB plugs.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
The connectors are utterly flimsy and break with heavy use.
That's the only "benefit" of Micro-USB I can think of...
Oh wait, how about that there are actually three different micro-USB connectors that are super hard to tell apart, and almost ensure that the micro connector you have is not the one you need? At least the trapezoid and flatter variants, I swear there is a third too...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Someone tell me one modern electronic device we use that runs on greater than 12V internally.
Webcams - 3.3V and 5V (internal laptop USB/external USB)
Most USB Devices: 5V
Even old shit hard drives ran off 12V and the controller ran off 5V.
CPU power input: 12V
PCI-E GPU power input: 12V
Pretty much every fucking device you see, you check the spec sheet on the ICs used and you're going to see 5V and 12V.
20V will get used for charging and I can guarantee plenty of devices are going to fry when the cable or controller fucks up and allows 20V to hit a 12V or 5V-rated IC. Someone in the USB standards body was smoking crack when they thought up a 20V fucking input/output.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Tim Cook has Courage, but not Satya Nadella?
Surely the adapters are only an issue until all the major players get on board with USB-C?! Odd comment from Microsoft...
One of the most influential companies refuses to support USB-C because it's not popular enough.
Given that this is a $1000 laptop and above and expected by Microsoft's own words to last a college student from freshman year to graduation. I think the technology should be up to the task of the future. Not s much on a $300 cloud book, but certainly a premium one. If we can give Apple grief for a lack of todays ports on Macbook Pro, we should also nix Microsoft for not thinking forward.
I carry around a Microsoft Lumia 950XL. It has USB-C. They are perfectly understanding the state of the market, and they just chose not to comply for whatever reason. Their reasoning is hogwash.
Yes, very true.
I'm sat here with various adapters and a couple of hubs. And ok, it seems like a costly kludge, but bandwidth and throughput are king, and that feels quite liberating, because on this laptop I can get to use an old Thunderbolt display and a bunch of Firewire drives and some eSATA drives and USB3 drives and a Thunderbolt enclosure, and so on. The point is, there's no bottleneck on account of the ports. Plus I stopped missing MagSafe when I realised I get to my desk and I plug in just ONE cable (either way up).
I don't think "ready" is the right word. It implies something that consumers lack.
Who ever complains about wall outlets? Noone because it one standard. There's probably a way to make them all have the same form factor. The tech difference lies mostly at the inside, the connectir type is arbitrary to a degree, as it's merely threads to carry electricity and data.
Bill Gates said that TCP/IP would never go mainstream. Microsoft's crystal ball is cloudy and needs polishing.
It's a confusing jumble of inconsistencies and it's potentially dangerous with the plethora of bad cables there, EVEN from previously reputable sellers.
The spec requires a resistor (??) or something mildly fancy in it, instead of just a raw cable.
Look at this.
http://blog.fosketts.net/2016/...
It's a really good idea which needs some cleanup work, right now I'm avoiding it like the plague until it's 'final'
My big problem with USB-C is that there is a ton of confusion about what it actually is.
USB-C is always sold as "super fast", "allows high-wattage, bi-drectional charging", "high data volume for video and the like", etc. etc. But USB-C is just a connector format. So I bought a motherboard with a USB-C port thinking I was getting all these great benefits, only to realize that the port I got was USB 3.0/USB 3.1 Gen 1 (what bozo decided that the confusing renaming of 3.0 to 3.1 Gen 1 was a good idea???), no better than the other 3.0 ports I had always had.
And this confusion happened to me, someone who is very technically-inclined. Even a ton of the tech sites I read when trying to sort this issue out conflate USB-C (the connector) with USB 3.1 Gen 2 (the spec). How is the general public supposed to figure this out?
you're too dumb to understand the connectors. So please buy their propriatory connector because that's safer for you dumbass morons to use without shorting the electrics with your drool.
I suppose it's an alternative to Apple's "Only SMRT people understand OUR stuff!".
Never said it was a good alternative.
FTA: the Surface Laptop features only one USB 3.1 Gen1 Type-A port, one headphone jack, one Mini DisplayPort connector, and the Surface Connect port. Simplicity.
No. Not simplicity. Complicated dongle-ville.
Most every user will have to buy a USB port, at the least. And MS is offering a big dongle for $200 that has all of the ports that the laptop should have.
One mini-display port in the laptop? Really? This thing ought to be able to drive two external monitors right out of the box (as most good laptops do), yet it only has one port for display?
Simplicity my ass.
I don't mind the proprietary connecter--it's easy to use.
Too bad the dock doesn't work with my 16:10 monitors...and the wired Ethernet takes some manual intervention to get working.
Translation: "Microsoft want you to buy their dock and nobody elses"
I swear, it is like Apple designed a windows laptop. "we made it ultra simple to not confuse our dumb-dumb consumers, but for an extra $200 you can have this accessory that gives it what it should have had in the first place"
Don't worry there will be a new USB type connector probably next year. I mean we already have what? At least 10 different USB plugs today. How many times to have these idiots have to reinvent the same plug for those 4 wires? Please for the love of god just stop.
I agree with the notion of leaving it off for now, but I have a feeling it won't be long before the type C port takes off. I don't think keeping it off this year is a bad thing, but 2018 might be a good time. My Dell XPS with its USB 3.1 type C port had been great even under Linux. Ethernet, display, more USB, the dongle is acceptable when I don't have to carry all that around in one larger laptop all the time
The truth is you also sacrifice some percentage of your wallet because the enclosure, circuitry and power supply isn't cheap. I already spent $1600 on the laptop and I can't even use two external monitors without buying an expensive thunderbolt dock of some sort.
Look, I get it. Some devices are not compatible with other devices and you have to be a wise shopper.
But this is no different than USB 2 devices not being compatible with USB 1 computers. The new format comes out, it gets adopted by the masses and old/incompatible crap just falls away.
USB-C IS the new format. The world is jumping on it. Even Apple is jumping on it, and they don't take anyone's standard. Grumbling about what devices don't work now is like complaining that you can't find dial up numbers for your 300 baud modem.
If Microsoft wants to stay relevant, they have to get ahead of the technology. Not drag it down into the muck while the world moves on.
Yes, very true.
I'm sat here with various adapters and a couple of hubs. And ok, it seems like a costly kludge, but bandwidth and throughput are king, and that feels quite liberating, because on this laptop I can get to use an old Thunderbolt display and a bunch of Firewire drives and some eSATA drives and USB3 drives and a Thunderbolt enclosure, and so on. The point is, there's no bottleneck on account of the ports. Plus I stopped missing MagSafe when I realised I get to my desk and I plug in just ONE cable (either way up).
And you forgot to mention that, because the MacBook Pro uses REAL USB-C/TB3, and not this hinky "Microsoft Expansion Connector", you get to choose among about a Googolplex of Hubs and Adapters, depending on your needs. And since there are FOUR identical USB-C/TB3 Ports on the MacBook Pro (except the non-touchbar 13", which has two ports, and the touchbar 13" which has four ports, but two of them are essentially USB-C/TB2), you can mix-and-match hubs for a myriad of I/O expansion configurations; but with the MS BS, you get to enjoy whatever MS has decided you need.
With USB-C/TB3, Apple has firmly left that "limited I/O" issue firmly in the past.
I once attempted to copy data between two USB2 drives (perhaps two hard drives, so fast in both read/write) on a USB1 computer (only two ports so sharing a single controller).
It was hilariously slow, as both ports shared (I believe) a theoretical 12Mbit/s bandwith, plus overhead, plus overhead of both working at the same time. But it was not incompatible. Worked just fine actually, as long as you were ready to wait hours for a gigabyte to copy.