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#1 |
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macrumors regular
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: South Dakota
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Firewire wanna be
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#2 |
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macrumors 68020
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bah.
they are having to modify a "standard" in order to finally get features that firewire has had all along. |
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| sparkleytone |
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#3 |
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macrumors 68020
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Dayton, Ohio
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the funniest thing about the article is this line:
"The technology is also expected to be used in cell phones and MP3 players. " Uh.... No? Thats not technology, thats archaic nonsense.
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#4 |
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macrumors regular
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama
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I'm just looking forward to FireWire2. Its gonna' dust everything!
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Excuse me, I'm cixelsyd today |
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#5 |
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macrumors 6502
Join Date: Oct 2001
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USB 2 is winning...
Hate to say it, but it looks like USB 2 is becoming far more prolific than Firewire. The fact is that USB 2 is cheaper and for most users, there isn't much of a perceived performance difference.
My predictions: 1) Firewire will be relegated to high-end niche applications within 2 years. 2) USB 2 will become a defacto standard in the same time frame Final prediction: Apple's clinging to FireWire will cause them to be at least a year late to the USB 2 party, leaving Apple consumers to suffer while PCs get all the good peripherals.
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software developer & Mac user |
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#6 |
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macrumors 68030
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Madison, Wi
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I disagree with Oldmac, USB2 has plenty of disadvantages so I think it would a bad move to shift to USB2. PC users might need a faster option than USB but Apple users already have it and it's much more reliable.
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Winner Of The '04 Animated Avatar Contest Misanthrope's Creed: One's company, two's a crowd. Solipsist's Creed: Zero's company, one's a crowd. |
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#7 |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
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Is it true that USB 2 doesn't provide power at the same time. Because if it is that sucks. That's just another thing that makes the iPod so cool.
P-Worm
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Follow my show The Movie Audit as well as watch my other videos on my YouTube Channel! |
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#8 |
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macrumors 68020
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Austin, TX
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USB sucks. It's good for mice, keyboards, and other small bandwidth devices. USB 2 is for really fast mice and keyboards
USB is a serial bus... It may be cheaper to put into a device, but then for some devices like hard drives, you need a power supply where firewire wouldn't. Hopefully Firewire2 will mop the floors with USB2... Another reason why USB sucks: It's made by intel Actually, the problem that I have with USB, is that it's like hooking up a hard drive with an old serial port, where firewire most resembles scsi.
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Hook 'em Horns! |
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#9 | |
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macrumors 6502a
Join Date: Jul 2002
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Quote:
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| funkywhat2 |
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#11 |
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macrumors 6502a
Join Date: Jul 2002
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most new standards are...(i think)
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| funkywhat2 |
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#12 |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Jan 2002
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Firewire is amazing; it's one of the best technologies to come out of Apple (much better than SCSI). But it's suffering the same fate as many Apple technologies: the lack of marketing and slowness of adoption.
I'm starting to lose confidence in the future of firewire. Firewire hasn't made anywhere near the kinds of market strides I expected and hoped it would. |
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#13 | |
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macrumors 68040
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: in transit
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Quote:
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flickr |
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#14 |
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macrumors member
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my old g4 was hit by lightning the other week. everything but my usb hub and my firewire cd burner was hooked into a surge protector.The lightning took out my usb scanner ,printer, and the usb port in my computer itself. bothe the usb hub hub and my cd burner had ground plugs and hooked to the same outlet yet my firewire drive came out unscathed. that is why i love firewire either that or i hate usb for being such a good cinductor.
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#15 |
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macrumors 6502a
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Eindhoven
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From the developer point of view is USB2 far better supported than FireWire. It's almost impossible to get simple and easy support for developing FireWire peripherals. The low level is good documented, but the high level and application layer software is difficult to master.
FireWire is only suitable for developers with high volume and enough money. Chipsets for FireWire are twice the price of the USB chipsets and twice the board area as well. And the fee for a vendor identifier is four times more expensive... I bet that USB2 will find a broader acceptance very soon. Well, at least I like it! |
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| backspinner |
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#16 |
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macrumors 68020
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i believe that the royalties for firewire have been significantly diminished if not completely done away with by now. i do know that the Firewire SDK is public source for the taking. So your point is basically lost.
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| sparkleytone |
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#17 | |
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macrumors 65816
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Brooklyn
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Quote:
It amazes me that all camcorders have Firewire, but most PC's don't. i guess that means most PC users arren't able to import or edit their movies. |
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#18 |
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Dec 2008
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(Bringing back an old thread.) The truth is that FireWire is vastly inferior to any USB connection for everyday use. Here are the reasons why:
1) Apple totes FireWire's support of hot-plugging, but hot-plugging FireWire devices is extremely risky for the device because the design of the plug allows for shorts to happen on the connection if the plug is not inserted perfectly. You run the risk of damaging your video camera, your audio interface, or your 1 TB hard drive containing your life's work. 2) Apple totes FireWire's support of daisy chaining devices, but this concept is flawed and impractical for many power-hungry FireWire devices. The fact is that performance suffers on the host device in particular, and while this may not be a problem for hard drives where only things like read/write speed are affected, it certainly is an issue when, for example, your audio interface suddenly can't handle the buffer at typical sample rates. 3) FireWire interfaces are notorious for failing when multiple devices are plugged in. Devices receive fluctuating streams of power and may not maintain an adequate signal, especially when one device is switched off or another device plugged into the interface is switched on. It's almost as if all the FireWire ports are acting as one, and in order to do anything simple such as switching off a device, you absolutely must turn off the computer and switch off every device, lest you spoil the other devices with power surges, etc. Such problems exist for devices which conform to FireWire standard—that is to say, the problems are not caused by the devices but rather by FireWire's inferior engineering. |
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| ezekielvictor |
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#19 | ||||
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
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Quote:
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And this is your first and only post so far on the boards? I think I smell troll... P-Worm
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Follow my show The Movie Audit as well as watch my other videos on my YouTube Channel! Last edited by P-Worm : Dec 2, 2008 at 12:08 PM. Reason: Typo |
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#20 | ||||
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Quote:
http://lowendmac.com/misc/03/0421.html http://forums.macosxhints.com/archiv...p/t-67251.html http://createdigitalmotion.com/2007/...kills-cameras/ http://www.sounddevices.com/notes/re...-hot-plugging/ And interestingly enough, a source from this very forum: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=545618 Quote:
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I was in the studio recently with an engineer using a G4, and the problem associated with plugging multiple devices into the same interface occurred when he had multiple FireWire hard drives plugged. The 500GB MyBook drive was not receiving power from the machine; he had to reboot his computer, which solved the problem. Quote:
Mac users and PC users each have their own separate problems, but it bothers me when one group purposely overlooks their own problems in order to feel better than the other group. Furthermore, even if I were an Intel employee (which I'm not ), I'm unsure how that is even remotely relevant considering that Apple now uses Intel processors.
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| ezekielvictor |
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#21 | |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: America's Third World
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Quote:
That's ancient history...
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#22 |
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Dec 2008
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| ezekielvictor |
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#23 | |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: America's Third World
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Quote:
Trying citing something regarding Firewire "problems" from this century if you want a meaningful debate. |
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#24 |
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macrumors 6502
Join Date: Nov 2008
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I work as IT for a very big university in northern california. Out of all the MacPro motherboards (and the iMacs we have for the labs), we never had USB fail on them, only firewire.
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| BittenApple |
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#25 |
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macrumors 68000
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: America's Third World
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So would you like for Apple to drop the Ethernet port on its computers and eliminate that "redundant" port? After all you could just plug in a USB ethernet adapter if you needed to use "old fashioned" wired networking....
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