That's irrelevant - a USB expansion card fits in a PCI slot and has its own controller. As long as the card is USB2 and the correct drivers are used it will run at the higher USB2 speed when connected to a device that supports it.
That's irrelevant - a USB expansion card fits in a PCI slot and has its own controller. As long as the card is USB2 and the correct drivers are used it will run at the higher USB2 speed when connected to a device that supports it.
In message , John writes
[snip]Did "your old Gran" also suggest posting to appropriate newsgroups?
No? Then it's bloody rich to complain about the replies to a self stated totally OT post.
Take it somewhere appropriate, then you might have reason to complain about the responses. Someone
I have a PCI card in a Win98SE machine and it's running USB2 speeds without problems.
You will have 6 USB 1.1 ports and 4 USB 2.0 ports making 10 ports in all.
You have been reading too many adverts. Most devices will run far slower than the maximum(!) speed specified by the USB 1 or 2 protocols and it's possible to have a USB 2 device running on USB 2 hardware at less than the USB 1 maximum. It depends on the device, the software, and much more. Whatever you do you mustn't read the USB 1 speed spec, the USB 2 speed spec and expect a speed increase of USB2/USB1.
Messagedededed via ebay.
Si
The PCI ports should run as 2.0 if it installs correctly.
The rated speeds are maxima and don't allow for management overheads. USB doesn't handle sustained high transfer rates well, you want Firewire or SCSI for that - they have the advantage that they don't load the host CPU anything like as much as USB. The USB2 standard incorporates the USB1 standard, so any USB1 device is technically also a USB2 device. Why they decided to call the two speeds high speed and full speed, with high speed being faster than full speed, we will probably never know. Obviously the host can't receive data faster than the client can send it, or vice versa, and we agree the nominal speeds aren't achievable data transfer rates. But USB2 high speed potentially delivers in the order of 20 to 40 times the speed of (USB1.1) full speed if the client can make full use of the bandwidth.
Thanks, it will be in the post in the morning.
USB2 support, even in XP Pro, requires an update from Microsoft.
Or install USB2 drivers, like the rest of us did in the dark ol' days before XP SP2.
JW
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