Friday, September 26, 2014

Firewire Port


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-- IEEE 1394 Provides More than 1.2 Billion Consumer, Computer, Industrial Products with Optimal Connectivity; Will Move to 1.6 Gigabit/second Bandwidth in 2011 -- SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--FireWire, the popular computer, consumer electronics and There's a very spirited discussion going on at MacRumors about the new aluminum MacBook's port lineup. If purported spy shots of the unreleased machine are to be believed, Firewire could missing from the complement of ports on its left side. The downside OS X Lion is being hailed by many as the most secure operating system yet, not just from Apple, but in total. In particular, its FileVault encryption rewrite is being widely hailed as one of the most secure, low-overhead ways yet to keep your data safe. Connected to the FireWire 800 port, the Verbatim was 47 percent faster at our copy to test than when connected over USB. It was 49 percent faster than USB in our duplication tests, 44 percent faster in our 5000 file copy test and again, twice as fast as of systems for things like data transfer or online gaming when Ethernet ports weren’t available. And because at 400 Mbps, Firewire offers an inherently faster connection than standard 100 Mbps Ethernet, there was even an arguable performance benefit The good news: most of Apple's professional-level computers -- the Power Mac G5 and the aluminum PowerBook G4 product lines -- feature built-in FireWire 800 ports. The bad news: most people I know don't yet own any FireWire 800 peripherals. They're still .

Life used to be simpler. Macs had fast firewire ports that could handle the fun stuff like camcorders, which need speedy data transfers; PC users, however, were limited to much slower USB ports that poked along at 12 Mbps and could handle only run-of-the The 6-pin FireWire 400 port made its way into every Apple laptop released between January 2003 and October 2008, with the exception of the MacBook Air. With a greater sustained throughput than USB 2.0, more power supplied to connected devices, and less It’s true. Well, I mean, the two are probably mutually exclusive, but the new MacBooks will have no FireWire capabilities at all. Rather, you’re left with two USB 2.0 ports. And oddly, the $999 MacBook (now dubbed the MacBook White) doesn’t have the I would bet that most of us are already familiar with the firewire port. These ports are common on many devices today with both PC and Mac users getting the ports and add in cards available for rigs that lack the port. FireWire is used for all sorts of .



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