USB 3.1 Type C cables are reversible and carry transfer speeds of up to 10 Gigabits per second.
MANILA, Philippines – While you might be expecting
more grandiose bits of technology to astound users in the tech industry,
there's one demonstration at the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas that should make everyone that's ever used a Universal Serial Bus
cable – USB cable for short – on their computer or device smile: a
demonstration of the capabilities of the USB 3.1 Type-C cable.
One of the big draws of the USB 3.1 Type-C is its reversible nature.
The micro usb cable will work work with either side up, lessening the hassles of
using a cable that everyone sees every day.
The device also packs the USB 3.1 standard, which has a top speed of
10 Gigabits per second (Gbps). This lets its transfer around 1,250
megabytes per second (MBps), twice the transfer speed of USB 3.0. By
comparison, a lot of people are more likely familiar with the aging USB
2.0 standard, which runs at about 480 megabits per second (mbps) – a
transfer rate of 60 MBps.
The Verge notes that specifications for USB 3.1 Type C were completed back in August, with cables entering production soon.
Meanwhile, CNET's report
adds that USB Type-C cables can carry much higher power than USB 3.0,
meaning mobile devices may also see themselves being powered by the USB
cable instead of a separate power adapter in the future.
There are also some companies that have gone ahead and blazed a trail
with support of Type-C. Nokia's N1 tablet will support Type-C USB
ports, while MSI also said its first gaming notebooks and its first
motherboard that will support USB 3.1 Type-C ports are on the way.
In the future, we may expect to see people transferring their life's
work onto an external drive in a second rather than a minute. That'll
certainly be a time-saver, and the best part is, we won't ever have to
worry about placing the future's USB cables in wrong.
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