Posted by Ilya Zakharevich on 01/20/08 22:11
[A complimentary Cc of this posting was sent to
Peter D
<please@.sk>], who wrote in article <13p6sjndnmlji49@corp.supernews.com>:
> In real life USB maximum transfers peak at about 2/3 of that speed. If you
> research actual test results, you'll often see speeds max out at 1/3 of the
> max of 480 Mbps. Becasue USB creates a network where every device "chats'
> with the central "host" (the computer in most cases) USB 2.0 requires more
> CPU prcesses than
.... Sorry, but the *technical contents* of this is exactly 0. If you
know WHY the throughput is not close to the theoretical maximum,
please explain. If you do not - we all ALREADY know that it is not
close to the theoretical maximum; do you see any reason to repeat this
statement again?
Thanks,
Ilya
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