USB Type

One venerable computing technology, USB, could be about to help kill off an even older standard, the 3.5mm audio jack.

The 3.5mm audio jack was popularized as the way to plug headphones into Sony’s portable Walkman tape player and got a new lease on life as a way to handle audio on virtually every mobile phone and PC. But if Intel and its allies get their way, the new USB Type-C connector that’s spread to some high-end PCs and phones will replace it in coming years.

One big problem with removing the 3.5mm jack is that countless sets of earbuds and headphones suddenly become useless unless you buy an easily misplaced adapter. Another is that it’s harder to charge a phone if you have headphones plugged into its sole port.

But at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco on Tuesday, Intel architects Brad Saunders and Rahman Ismail sketched out a coming USB audio standard that could help push the 3.5mm jack aside. The new specification, due this quarter, adds features to ensure a USB headphone doesn’t drain too much battery power and defines how buttons for pausing music or lowering volume work.

The work “will really make USB Type-C the right connector for audio,” Saunders said.

Technology standards arrive all the time, but the 3.5mm audio jack is a surprisingly contentious issue. Rumors that the upcoming iPhone 7 won’t have one have worked the tech industry into a lather — with some people hoping the jack will stay and others more sanguine about its possible departure.

Why you might be happy to lose the 3.5mm jack

But there are good arguments to be made for embracing USB audio, Saunders said, and the companies that make USB controller chips are very excited about the idea.

Intel has high hopes for USB's future​Intel has high hopes for USB's future​Enlarge Image

Intel has high hopes for USB’s future.


Stephen Shankland/CNET

For one thing, the 3.5mm audio jack takes up precious volume inside phones, which we all want to be as slim as possible. For another, the analog circuitry of 3.5mm audio can cause interference that disrupts other electronics in a phone, Saunders said.

And digital audio opens up possibilities for lots of sound-processing options without requiring expensive headphones or earbuds. That includes audio effects to make music sound like it’s playing in a big concert hall, or signal processing to cancel noise like jet engines or rumbling trains. “All of those come into play if audio is in a digital domain,” Saunders said, which would let phone makers offer premium features without having to sign deals with premium audio companies like Dolby or Bose.

USB devices have controller chips that consume power. That’s no problem for PCs with big batteries, but it is for phones. That’s why the new USB audio standard requires power management abilities like turning off features that aren’t being used, Saunders said. As a result, with USB headphones, “the difference in battery life is negligible” compared with 3.5mm audio jacks.

There’s another ability for USB on the way too: video. DisplayPort and HDMI are good for high-end video, but many people have more modest needs. An updated USB video technology under development will handle those needs — and unlike HDMI and DisplayPort, will work even if people are using a USB hub to plug lots of devices into a single USB port on their laptop or phone.

“It’s not a replacement for HDMI,” Ismail said. “It’s good enough to do productivity work or watch movies, but not for a gaming system.”

Where you’ll find USB Type-C already

The USB Type-C connectors are new to many people but have started arriving on devices like the Apple MacBook and HP Spectre laptops as well as the Google Nexus 6P and Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phones. The port is destined for greatness.

The first advantage you’ll find with USB Type-C is that the cables are reversible — there’s no fiddling with the cable to figure out which way is up. The next advantage is that Type-C can carry more power to charge your phone faster and even your laptop. With a new technology called USB Power Delivery, USB Type-C devices can handle nearly 100 watts of power, plenty to power all kinds of computers and devices that plug into them. USB Type-C also can carry DisplayPort video to external monitors.

There’s going to be a period of confusion, though, as we get used to the new standards. That’s especially true since you won’t be able to count on every USB port supporting every new USB feature.

But the USB Implementers Forum that develops USB is happy with the port’s progress, said President Jeff Ravencraft at the conference.

“We have a single cable that can do pretty much everything you want it to,” he said.

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USB Type

The folks behind the USB Type-C standard have a new approach to keep sketchy cables from zapping your laptop or evildoers from hacking your phone.

USB Type-C brings new perks to the mundane chore of connecting devices to each other and to chargers, but problems have cast a shadow — notably when Google employee Benson Leung’s effort to flag faulty cables fried his laptop and testing gear earlier this year.

That’s why industry powers behind the tech announced on Tuesday a USB authentication technology that will guard against that type of problem and will keep criminals from using hacked USB devices to launch attacks. The technology functions behind the scenes on your devices so you won’t have to think about it, at least until your phone refuses to work with an uncertified airport charger or freebie cable.

USB is a remarkable success, starting two decades ago as a way to connect printers and keyboards to PCs, picking up duties charging phones and syncing their data, and now in everything from cars to TVs. USB-C expands further by letting you use USB to power your PC and to send videos to TVs and external monitors. The fact that it’s reversible — there’s no up or down to the connector — is icing on the cake.

The USB Implementers Forum is “unwavering in our mission to solidify USB Type-C as the single cable of the future,” Jeff Ravencraft, president of the standards group, said in a statement.

But the new future is messy. For example, it’s not always clear what capabilities a USB port will include. Some will feature video support. Others will offer USB 3.1’s new super-high data transfer speeds of 10 gigabits per second. Separately, faulty cables led Amazon to take the unusual step last month of threatening to banish sellers offering bad USB-C cables.

Maturing technology should ease the growing pains. Cable powerhouse Monoprice announced a new Palette line of colorful USB-C cables on Tuesday. They’re limited to slower 480 megabit-per-second USB 2.0 speeds for now. Later this month, Monoprice will release cables that support USB 3.0’s tenfold increase to 5Gbps, and in coming months, USB 3.1’s 10Gbps.

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USB Type


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This is the USB you’ve been waiting for

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LAS VEGAS — At CES 2015, folks at USB Implementers Forum and Intel showcased a quick, yet impressive, demo of what USB 3.1 Type-C is capable of.

If you haven’t heard of USB Type-C, I laid out its details here. To quickly recap, apart from the fact that with Type-C there’s no need to worry about which side of the cable to plug in (it works either side up), it also packs the USB 3.1 standard, which comes with a top speed of 10Gbps, twice the current speed of USB 3.0.

Check out the new reversible USB (pictures)

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And the best part is, after having had hands-on experience with it, I found the new connection standard totally exciting.

For the demo, the group used two Samsung SSD 840 Pro drives together in a RAID 0 setup. Connected to a computer using a Type-C connection, the benchmark test showed a sustained speed of more than 800MBps for both read and write. Prior to USB 3.1, this type of speed was only available with a Thunderbolt connection.

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The benchmark scores of the demo, more than 800MBps for both reading and writing.
Dong Ngo/CNET

USB Type-C can also carry much higher power than USB 3.0 and going forward there will be many mobile devices, even laptops, that can be powered via the USB cable instead of using a separate power adapter.

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At left, a USB Type-C USB 3.1 port built onto an electronics board. At right, the Type-C cable.
Sarah Tew/CNET

Right now, the Nokia N1 is the first tablet on the market that uses Type-C USB ports and at CES 2015, MSI announced its first gaming notebooks, the GT72, and its first motherboard, the X99A Gaming 9 ACK, that will come with built-in USB 3.1 Type-C ports. Both of these products will ship by March this year.

You can expect even more devices to use this new and exciting USB standard in a very near future.

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