The arrival of high-speed USB allows laptops to have direct communication
with devices including digital cameras, external hard drives, and CD and DVD
drives (which are very demanding of bandwidth).
The first iteration of the standard, USB 1.0, is not quite as zippy — only
12 Mbps — but is sufficient for some uses. A USB 1.0 device (or one that
follows the slightly improved 1.1 specification) will work in a USB 2.0 port,
although it stays at its original speed.
Usbing a USB port ..............................................................................
Most laptops offer two USB ports, and devices can be directly plugged in to
either. (It doesn’t matter which one you use; the computer sorts out all of the
details for you.) If you need to attach more USB devices than your laptop has
Chapter 16: Breaking Out of the Box: PC Cards, USB, and FireWire 245
Down to the FireWire
The fastest wired communication standards on
consumer-grade laptops are FireWire and USB
2.0, which are capable of transmitting data as
much as 3,500 to 4,000 times faster than an orig-
inal standard serial port. The accompanying
table shows the comparison.
FireWire versus USB 2.0
Port Typical Speed
Speed Index
Standard serial port 115 Kbps 1
Standard parallel port 115 KBps 8
USB 1.1 12 Mbps 104
ECP/EPP parallel port 16–24 Mbps 133–200
IEEE 1394/FireWire 400 Mbps 3,478
USB 2.0 480 Mbps 4,174