Undoubtedly the arrival of USB 3.0 interfaces on MacBook mobile computers is a significant step to the future of SuperSpeed peripherals for Mac computers. Delivering up to TEN times the potential performance bandwidth over slower USB 2.0, USB 3.0 promises to provide far better performance for a broad assortment of home computer peripherals. USB3's backward compatibility with existing USB 2.0 components guarantees it will likely be a comparatively effortless change to the high-speed USB 3.0 standard.
Apple Inc. is now shipping USB 3.0 ports on the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro, and the new Retina Display MacBook Pro products. It's expected that before the end of 2012, Apple will likely also be modifying it's Mac mini and iMac desktop computers to provide USB 3.0 ports. Apple has stated that in early 2013 the Macintosh Pro desktop tower will get a major revision that will feature both ThunderBolt and USB 3.0 port enhancements.
Aside from USB 3.0 cables, cards, and USB device sharing hubs, the USB 3 disk drive market for portable and personal computer file backup drives has already made the change to USB 3.0 interface. A broad variety of SuperSpeed backup solutions are presently available, and that includes things like USB 3.0 memory card readers and extremely fast US3 thumb drives.
A wider range of many other sorts of USB 3.0 Mac computer accessories have yet to reach the marketplace. However, we can look forward to additional gadgets such as USB 3.0 printers and scanners, USB 3.0 HDTV tuners, web cams, and SuperSpeed audio and video recording equipment to reach the market in the months ahead that will be good for both Macintosh and Microsoft Windows users as USB 3.0 adoption explodes across the computer sphere.
MacGizmoGuy reviews new and time-tested Apple Macintosh friendly computer peripherals with an eye for some of the best Mac accessories and gadgets to have a great Mac OSX computing experience.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Saturday, June 30, 2012
ThunderBolt Drives and Adapters For Mac
Personal computer manufacturers Intel and Apple unleashed a bleeding edge computer data interface named ThunderBolt about a year or so back. It's been slow to reach critical mass, but we're seeing ever more Mac ThunderBolt accessories technology reaching the market place. Capable of data speeds of up to Ten Gbps on each of its dual channels, it delivers twice the bandwidth of its closest competitor - the Five Gbps emerging "Super-Speed" USB 3.0 interface spec.
Mac users will find largest performance gains will be in the data storage area. A ThunderBolt HDD drive ( visit http://www.thunderbolt-hard-drive.com ) interface promises insanely fast data transfer and backup speeds, particularly when paired with SSD flash drives. A full DVD disc of data can be copied in less than sixty seconds, an entire Terabyte backup drive worth of videos, music and pictures in just a few minutes. Expect other data intensive Thunderbolt peripherals for Mac and PC such as HDTV tuners, High-Def webcams and other high demand devices to hit the market to take advantage of the speed ThunderBolt technology provides. Keep in mind, ThunderBolt is not exclusive to the Mac platform. Intel and other PC makers will soon be shipping logic-boards with ThunderBolt interfaces built-in too.
These ThunderBolt ports are an extension of either a Mac or PC computers internal PCI Express bus. As such, it provides a very direct and multiple-lane freeway to a computer's memory and central processor. Imagine it as an expansion card slot that's just a small external port on the side of your laptop or desktop setup. This technology initially was launched on Apple's MacBook laptop and Macintosh desktop platforms as a solitary ThunderBolt port where the DisplayPort connection for video used to be. That's an important distinction to note: ThunderBolt can also drive high-resolution external LCD displays along with other ThunderBolt drive adapters that can adapt to other eSATA, FireWire, Ethernet and USB 3.0 peripherals.
Mac users will find largest performance gains will be in the data storage area. A ThunderBolt HDD drive ( visit http://www.thunderbolt-hard-drive.com ) interface promises insanely fast data transfer and backup speeds, particularly when paired with SSD flash drives. A full DVD disc of data can be copied in less than sixty seconds, an entire Terabyte backup drive worth of videos, music and pictures in just a few minutes. Expect other data intensive Thunderbolt peripherals for Mac and PC such as HDTV tuners, High-Def webcams and other high demand devices to hit the market to take advantage of the speed ThunderBolt technology provides. Keep in mind, ThunderBolt is not exclusive to the Mac platform. Intel and other PC makers will soon be shipping logic-boards with ThunderBolt interfaces built-in too.
These ThunderBolt ports are an extension of either a Mac or PC computers internal PCI Express bus. As such, it provides a very direct and multiple-lane freeway to a computer's memory and central processor. Imagine it as an expansion card slot that's just a small external port on the side of your laptop or desktop setup. This technology initially was launched on Apple's MacBook laptop and Macintosh desktop platforms as a solitary ThunderBolt port where the DisplayPort connection for video used to be. That's an important distinction to note: ThunderBolt can also drive high-resolution external LCD displays along with other ThunderBolt drive adapters that can adapt to other eSATA, FireWire, Ethernet and USB 3.0 peripherals.
Labels:
computer peripherals,
displayport,
lightpeak,
macintosh,
thunderbolt,
usb3
Saturday, June 2, 2012
A New Generation Of Mac Computer Accessories
SuperSpeed USB 3.0 is coming to Apple's Mac. It's one of those historical inevitabilities -- albeit one that's been rather deliberately delayed by Intel and Apple until they could get ThunderBolt out there and established first. However, with the release of Intel's latest Ivy-Bridge chipsets and it's inbuilt support for USB 3.0, the tide will shift rapidly as PC and Mac systems with native USB3 support ship en masse by year's end.
With Apple's World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC) slated for this month, expect new product introductions that will reveal whether the Mac is going to get USB 3.0 support sooner - rather than later.
The benefits of 5GBps USB3 SuperSpeed are many: Familiar cabling, backward compatibility with legacy USB 2.0 and 1.1 speed devices, more milliamps of power for faster device charging, and more intelligent power use and management for better battery life in laptops and portable devices. With potentially up to 10-fold data transfer speeds, backing up data or synching an iGadget device will take a fraction of the time.
The benefit of SuperSpeed USB 3.0 accessories are just too compelling for the consumer. But most Mac users don't know that. What's been missing are real voices in the industry TELLING and SELLING it's benefits to the public. Without an icon like Steve Jobs telling users why they're gonna want the latest USB 3.0 enabled MacBook or iPad - the role of that will be left to Steve Cook or Phil Schiller in the months to come.
With Apple's World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC) slated for this month, expect new product introductions that will reveal whether the Mac is going to get USB 3.0 support sooner - rather than later.
The benefits of 5GBps USB3 SuperSpeed are many: Familiar cabling, backward compatibility with legacy USB 2.0 and 1.1 speed devices, more milliamps of power for faster device charging, and more intelligent power use and management for better battery life in laptops and portable devices. With potentially up to 10-fold data transfer speeds, backing up data or synching an iGadget device will take a fraction of the time.
The benefit of SuperSpeed USB 3.0 accessories are just too compelling for the consumer. But most Mac users don't know that. What's been missing are real voices in the industry TELLING and SELLING it's benefits to the public. Without an icon like Steve Jobs telling users why they're gonna want the latest USB 3.0 enabled MacBook or iPad - the role of that will be left to Steve Cook or Phil Schiller in the months to come.
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