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NEC announced USB 3.0 SOC

news article released on: 22 September, 2009

NEC Electronics has announced its new USB 3.0 (or, SuperSpeed USB) system-on-a-chip (SOC) design solution that could bring forth USB 3.0-equipped hardware very soon. The company's new SOC is designed to work with NEC's USB-IF Certified USB 3.0 Host Controller. NEC Electronics expects rapid adoption of the solution by customers developing mass storage, display and video applications, ...

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#1 23 Sep 2009 @ 6:33
SuckRaven Suspended due non-functional email address
Sweet! Now for my next computer, I will have USB 3.0, SATA 3.0, PCIe 3.0, and hopefully some other bells & whistles to go with my shiny new 32nm Westmere die-shrink of Nehalem. Gonna be one kick ass machine. See what kinds of goodness AMD/ATi & NVIDIA have cookin' for the holiday season, and who knows...? It might even be able to run 'Crysis'. Hehehe. But seriously good job NEC, USB 3.0 has been waaaay too long coming.
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#2 23 Sep 2009 @ 15:29
there is no USB 3.0 equipment on the market. nobody is going to buy all there USB equipment again.

granted the extra bandwidth is good, as it means more devices can now use there maximum Performance. when they start maxing out USB 3.0 with devices that use 3/4 of the maximum bandwidth it will be USB 4.0 time.
This message has been edited since its posting. Latest edit was made on 23 Sep 2009 @ 15:30

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#3 25 Sep 2009 @ 4:56
SuckRaven Suspended due non-functional email address
It's not that anyone will re-buy all of their USB equipment, and for most things USB 2.0 is plenty fast. However, the new 6.0Gbps SATA 3 standard can already max out the bandwidth offered by USB 2.0. Also, new generations of SSDs as well as other flash baced devices (thumb drives for instance) will benefit from the added speed. As for the lack of devices a the moment, that is always how it is. (except maybe in the case of 802.11n, where the standard was only officially ratified after products were already on the market for at least 2 or 3 years.) The devides will come, and if one happens to be in the market for some particular peripheral at that time, I don't think anyone would argue that the increased performance is a bad thing.

SuckRaven
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