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USB Flash Drive
• USB Flash Drives or commonly called as Pen Drives
  are popular removable storage media having a
  storage capacity up to 256 GB.
• It is a kind of memory card that can be plugged into
  a computer‟s USB port.
• They are preferred best storage device because
  they are faster, smaller and have a longer life span.
• These USB mass storage supported natively by
  modern operating systems such as Linux, Mac OS
  X, and Windows.
History
• Flash memory was invented by Toshiba in 1984, but
  the first commercial flash drive was released by Intel
  in 1988.
• IBM was the first North American seller of a USB
  flash drive, and marketed an 8 MB version of the
  product in 2001 “DiskOnKey“ under brand name
  “ThumbDrive”.
• Lexar can also lay claim to a pioneering USB flash
  drive product named as “Compact Flash”.
• Lexar offered a companion card reader and USB
  cable that eliminated the need for a USB hub.
History (Cont.,)
• The first flash drives were made in sizes of
  8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB, and 64 MB.
• These were marketed as "a true floppy-killer", and
  this design was continued up to 256 MB.
• Netac Technology of China also holds a USB flash
  technology which it has licensed to various
  manufacturers including the USB direct factory.
History (Cont.,)

            Compact Flash




DiskOnKey   NETAC TECHNOLOGY
History (Cont.,)
•   By improvements in this technology now means
    that we can offer a 64GB model to our customers.
    This is 8,000 times larger than the original IBM
    USB.
•   In this time there have been 3 USB standards.
     USB 1.0
     USB 2.0
     USB 3.0
Evolution
Versions of USB
• USB 0.7: Released in November 1994.
• USB 0.8: Released in December 1994.
• USB 0.9: Released in April 1995.
• USB 0.99: Released in August 1995.
• USB 1.0 Release Candidate: Released in
  November 1995.
• USB 1.0 released in January 1996
• USB 1.1 released in August 1998
• USB 2.0 released in April 2000
• USB 3.0 released in November 2008
Structure of USB Drive
Internal Structure
• The important parts of the pen drive are USB
  connector, crystal oscillator, memory chips and a
  controller to interact with the PC.
• IC SK6211 is a controller which facilitates the data
  communication between the PC/Laptop and the
  flash memory (EEPROM) of the pen drive.
• This controller IC can interface with
  all kind of NAND EEPROM.
• The operating system provides
  inbuilt libraries to be installed before
  using these devices.
Internal Structure(Cont.,)
• The chip is a NAND type flash memory chip which
  has fast read, write and erase cycles.
• The storage capacity of this memory is 2GB. There
  is another similar chip with storage capacity of 2GB
  on the other side.
• A pen drive consists of memory element, normally a
  flip-flop.
• A group of 4 flip-flops together stores 4-bit number.
• Similarly, a group of 8*10^9 flip-flops can store 1GB
  of data.
• A group of 8,000 Million flip-flops are embedded on
  a single Silicon Chip to form 1GB pen drive.
File Systems

• Flash drives ship
  preformatted with the
  FAT12, FAT16. FAT32, or
  ExFat file systems.
• Also, standard FAT
  maintenance utilities
  (e.g., ScanDisk) can be used
  to repair or retrieve corrupted
  data.
• The drive can be reformatted
  to any file system supported
  by the host operating system.
File Systems
• Even Distribution: USB flash drives have this
  'wear leveling' feature built into the software
  controller to prolong device life, while others
  do not, so it is not necessarily helpful to install
  one of these file systems.


• Defragmenting: Flash drives
  can be defragmented and that
  defragmenting shortens the
  life of the drive by making
  many unnecessary writes.
ReadyBoost
• ReadyBoost was introduced in Windows
  Vista, where it was a heavily promoted feature.

• Unfortunately, ReadyBoost isn‟t a silver bullet that
  will make your computer faster, although it may be
  useful in some limited circumstances only.

• Ready Boost works in conjunction with SuperFetch.
  When you launch an application, computer reads its
  files from memory, which is faster, instead from
  disk, which is slower.
ReadyBoost
ReadyBoost
• SuperFetch works with a USB stick – that‟s
  ReadyBoost in action.

• When you connect a USB drive to your computer
  and enable ReadyBoost, Windows will store
  SuperFetch data on your USB drive, freeing up
  system memory so this can theoretically improve
  your system‟s performance.
ReadyBoost




• ReadyBoost probably won‟t improve your
  computer‟s performance much. If you have a very
  small amount of RAM (512 MB or so) and a very fast
  USB drive, you may see some increase
  in performance.
Types of USB
• Generally USB are classified based on its
  connectors.
• It can be differentiated as MALE and FEMALE.
   USB A-Type             USB Mini-b (5-pin)
   USB B-Type             USB Mini-b (4-pin)
   Micro-USB A            USB 3.0 A-Type
   Micro-USB B            USB 3.0 B-Type
   Micro-USB AB           USB 3.0 Micro B
USB A-Type
• A-style connector is a flat, rectangular interface.
• The A-socket connector provides a "downstream"
  connection that is intended for use solely on host
  controllers and hubs.
• It was not intended for use as an "upstream" connector
  on a peripheral device.
• A-A cables are used to connect USB devices with an
  A-style Female port to a PC or another USB
  device, and for data transfer between two computer
  systems.
USB B-Type

• The B-style connector is designed for use on USB
  peripheral devices.
• The B-style interface is squarish in shape, and has
  slightly beveled corners on the top ends of the
  connector.
• The B-socket is an "upstream" connector that is only
  used on peripheral devices. Because of this, the
  majority of USB applications require an A-B cable.
Micro-USB A
• This USB can be found on newer mobile devices such
  as cellphones, GPS units, PDAs and digital cameras.
• Micro-USB A is physically smaller in size, while still
  supporting the high speed transfer rate of 480 Mbps
  and On-The-Go features.
• The connection can be easily identified by its white-
  colored receptacle and compact 5 pin design.
Micro-USB B
• This USB can also be found on newer mobile devices
  such as cellphones, GPS units, PDAs and digital
  cameras.
• Micro-USB B is smaller in size, while still supporting
  the high speed transfer rate of 480 Mbps and On-The-
  Go features.
• The connection can be easily identified by its black-
  colored receptacle and compact 5 pin design.
Micro-USB AB
• This versatile USB can accept either
  a Micro-USB A or Micro-USB B
  cable connection.
• This interface can be easily
  identified by its gray-colored
  receptacle and compact 5 pin
  design.
• This connector type only exists as a
  receptacle for On-The-Go devices
  and will not exist on a cable.
USB Mini-b(5-pin)
• USB type-B, which its size is almost a half inch on each
  side. This made it unsuitable for many devices such as
  PDAs, digital cameras, and cellphones.
• As a result, USB Mini-b has came. This 5-pin Mini-b is the
  most popular style. This USB is quite small, about two-
  thirds the width of an A-type USB.
• It is also specified for use in the newer standard called USB
  On-The-Go which allows peripheral devices to
  communicate with the presence of a host controller.
USB Mini-b(4-pin)
• This unofficial USB is found on many digital
  cameras, especially certain Kodak® models.
• It resembles the shape of standard B-type USB, with
  beveled corners; however it is much smaller in size.
USB Mini-b(Fuji):
• This is another unofficial USB also widely used on
  digital cameras especially certain models
  manufactured by Fuji®.
USB 3.0 A-Type
• This A-Type USB is commonly found on host
  controllers in computers and hubs.
• The A-socket connector provides a "downstream"
  connection that is intended for use solely on host
  controllers and hubs.
• It is similar in to the A-Type connector used in USB 2.0
  & USB 1.1.
• The USB 3.0 A-type has additional pins. The USB 3.0
  designed for SuperSpeed applications.
• These are often blue in color to help identify them from
  previous versions.
USB 3.0 B-Type
• USB 3.0 B-Type is found on USB 3.0 devices.
• This connector is designed to carry data and
  power in USB SuperSpeed applications.
• Cables with this USB are not compatible with USB
  2.0 or USB 1.1 devices.
• But, USB 3.0 devices with this connection type
  can accept previous USB 2.0 and 1.1 cabling.
USB 3.0 Micro-B

• The USB 3.0 Micro B is found on USB 3.0 devices.
• This connector is designed to carry data and power in
  USB SuperSpeed applications.
• Cables with this connector are not compatible with
  USB 2.0 or USB 1.1 devices.
USB Vs PS/2
           USB                             PS/2
• (USB) is a computer           • PS/2 is a connector port
  connector that was              used on computer
  developed in 1996.              peripherals such as
• It existed alongside            keyboards and mice.
  competing ports such as       • The technology was
  serial and PS/2.                developed in 1987 by IBM
• Advantages of USB, such         as an alternative to serial
  as a smaller physical           ports.
  footprint and faster speed,   • The dedicated connection
• In May 2011, it is the          for a keyboard and mouse
  dominant connection port        freed serial ports for use
  installed on laptops,           with other devices.
  computers etc.,
Advantages
                    Advantages:
• Durable solid state for transporting data from one
  location to another.
• The near ubiquity of USB support on modern PCs
  means that such a drive will work in most places.
• The cheapest of Flash Drives will store dozens of
  floppy disks worth of data; some hold more data
  than a CD; top Flash Drives can hold data more
  than a DVD.
• Most modern OS can read & write to flash drivers
  without any additional device drivers.
Disadvantages
                Disadvantages:
• They can sustain only a limited number of write &
  erase cycles before failure.
• Write operations will gradually slow as the device
  ages.
• They can be damaged or have data corrupted if an
  impact loosens circuit connection.
Errors in USB drive
•   Pen Drive not detected
•   Pen Drive disabled at office or college
•   Problem in removing pen drive
•   Virus affect in pen drive
•   Problem in formatting pen drive
•   Delayed Write failed error
•   Disable data writing on pen drive
Errors in USB drive
        “USB device not Recognized”
• The problem occur due to wrong registry entries. (i.e.) you
  need to delete UpperFilters and the LowerFilters registry
  values.
  Open Start >> Run, and type “regedit”.

• Locate UpperFilters registry value.
   – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetContr
     olClass{4D36E980-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
   – Click on Edit menu, and select Delete and click OK.

• Locate LowerFilters registry value.
   – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetContr
     olClass{4D36E967-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
   – Click on Edit menu, and select Delete and click OK.
Errors in USB drive
Errors in USB drive
               “Pen Drive disabled”
• Windows will now show a
  New Hardware Wizard to
  install the drivers but it is
  disabled.
• This is because:
   – 1. By Disabling USB Ports
     from Device Manager.
   – 2. By Un-installing the
     USB Mass Storage
     Drivers.
Errors in USB drive
“Generic volume cannot be stopped right now”
• When you try to eject a USB pen-drive by using “Safely
  Remove Hardware > Safely remove USB Mass Storage
  device” option, windows should stop all the read-write
  operations on the drive so that the drive can be
  removed.
• But sometimes it shows a error message.
• This is because, some file on your pen drive is in use by
  some other program on that computer.
• So close all such files or applications and try removing
  the drive.
Errors in USB drive
           “Virus affect in Pen Drive”

• Virus always creates a
  autorun.inf file which is a
  system, hidden and a read
  only file on your pen drive.
• When user double clicks on
  the pen drive files pointed by
  the autorun.inf got executed
  which copies the virus files
  on your system.
• E.g. New Folder.exe
Errors in USB drive

• In order to protect your pen
  drive from viruses you need
  to create a blank file named
  autorun.inf through notepad
  and place it in the root
  directory.
Errors in USB drive
        “Problem in formatting Pen Drive”
• When they try to format the pen drive, It shows error
  “Windows was unable to complete the format".
• It is due to :
   – Virus or Trojan infection.
   – Corrupted flash chips on the pen drive
   – Fake pen drives
Errors in USB drive
             “Delayed Write failed error”
• “Windows delayed write failed - Windows was
  unable to save all the data for the file M:$Mft. The
  data has been lost. This error may be caused by a
  failure of your computer hardware or network
  connection. Please try to save this data elsewhere.”

• Open My Computer, right click on the USB
  drive, click on properties.
  – Go to Tools > Error-checking
  – This will show a window like the one below. Check
     the check-boxes to Automatically fix the file system
     and Scan for and attempt recovery of bad sectors.
     Click Start.
Errors in USB drive
Errors in USB drive
                “Write Protected”
• Registry Editor by typing regedit in Run dialog.

• Navigate to the key
  HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlS
  etControl

• Right click on “Control” key -> New -> Key. Name it
  “StorageDevicePolicies” without quotes.

• Now right click on this newly created key and then
  click New -> DWORD value and name it as
  “WriteProtect”.
Errors in USB drive
“Light Peak”
• Thunderbolt is an optical cable interface for
  connecting peripheral devices to a computer via an
  expansion.
• Originally codenamed Light Peak and developed by
  Intel, with technical collaboration of Apple in 2009.
• Light Peak can be at least twice as fast as USB
  3.0, also known as Super-speed USB.
• It can deliver bandwidth starting at 10 Gigabits per
  second, with the potential to extend to 100 Gb/s.
“Light Peak”
• At its lowest speed, it means you could transfer a
  full-length Blu-Ray movie in less than 30 seconds.
• “This year, major PC and accessories makers are
  introducing products that use USB 3.0, whose data
  transfer rates of 4 Gb/s is up to ten times faster than
  USB 2.0.But optical technology that drives Light
  Peak can do better.”
                       -Intel.
Introduction
• Thunderbolt™ technology is a transformational high-
  speed, dual protocol I/O innovation, provides
  flexibility and supports data (PCI Express) and HD
  display (DisplayPort) connections over a single
  cable.

• It can chain up to six thin profile systems and
  devices like Laptops and Ultrabooks.

• 10 Gbps of full duplex bandwidth per channel.
Daisy-Chain


HD Display                                          Data
                                                    storage




                                                   Laptop




      •      Devices in Daisy chain connection supported.

      •      Hotplug Ready
Protocol Architecture

• Thunderbolt technology is based on a new
  architecture with full-duplex links.
• Thunderbolt port is capable of providing the full
  bandwidth of the link in both directions.
• No sharing of bandwidth between ports or between
  upstream and downstream directions.
Protocol Architecture (cont.,)

• The Thunderbolt protocol
  physical layer is responsible for
  link maintenance including hot-
  plug detection, and data
  encoding to provide highly
  efficient data transfer.

• The heart of the Thunderbolt
  protocol architecture is the
  transport layer.
Protocol Architecture (cont.,)
• DisplayPort and PCI Express protocols are mapped
  onto the transport layer.

• Mapped protocol packets between a source device
  and a destination device may be routed over a path
  that may cross multiple Thunderbolt controllers.
Performance
• February 24, 2011 – MacBook Pro update
• Mini display port
• USB 2.0 + Thunderbolt
• MacBook Pro side panel
• Thunderbolt port
• Thunderbolt cable
Succession
USB v1.0
• Released in January 1996
• USB 1 specified data rates of 1.5 Mbit/s (Low-
  Bandwidth) and 12 Mbit/s (Full-Bandwidth).
• Few USB devices made it to market until USB
  1.1, released in August 1998, which fixed
  problems identified in 1.0, mostly relating to
  hubs.
USB v2.0
• Released in April 2000.
• Added higher maximum signaling rate of
  480 Mbit/s (effective throughput up to 35 MB/s
  or 280 Mbit/s) (now called “‟Hi-Speed”).
• Became popular due to cost/benefit
  advantage
• E.g. IEEE 1394 – high bandwidth, low cost.
USB v3.0
•   Also referred to as SuperSpeed USB.
•   Speeds 10x faster than 2.0
     • Transfer of 25 GB file in approx. 70
       seconds.
•   Optimized power efficiency
•   Backward compatible with USB 2.0
     • USB 2.0 device will work with USB 3.0 host

     • USB 3.0 device will work with USB 2.0 host
Speed Comparison
Wireless USB
• WUSB is a form of USB technology that uses
  radio-frequency (RF).
• WUSB technology is based on the WiMedia
  Ultra-Wideband common radio platform.
• WUSB can provide transfer rates up to 480
  Mbps (at 3 m) or 110 Mbps (at 10 m).
• WUSB also allows for no more then 127
  devices connected to a single host controller.
USB 3.0 Vs Others


USB 3.0          Developed by     "Firewire“       eSATA          ExpressCard
(5Gbps) is       Intel, the       standard by      successfully   standard for
theoretically    10Gb/s bi-       Apple            address the    the increased
10 times         directional      developers,      issue of the   speed
faster than      interface is     has              interface      requirements
USB 2.0. A       technically      repeatedly       bottleneck,    of today's
5400-rpm         PCI Express      sent mixed       and allowed    mobile
portable drive   on a cable. It   messages         fast hard      technologies.
reaching         can support      with the         drives.eSATA   Closely tied to
100MB/s.         both hubs as     ditching of      supports a     both the PCI
It has High      well as a        Firewire first   data rate of   Express and
bandwidth.       daisy chain of   from iPods.      3.2Gbps.       USB 3.0
                 up to 7                                          specifications
                 devices.
USB CELL
• USB rechargeable batteries are from Moixa.
• USB rechargeable batteries that you will be able to use
  over and over again without them ever running out.
• Just bust out your laptop and start charging the
  batteries, and you will be up and running again in a
  jiffy.
Bluetooth USB
• Conversion Bluetooth PC into Bluetooth enabled.
• Wireless connect to Bluetooth devices such as
  mobile phones, PDA or PC, for data
  transfer, networking, and dial-up, fax.
• Enabling wireless connection to Bluetooth headset.
• Supporting Bluetooth voice data.
• Supporting multi languages.
• Bluetooth 2. 0 USB Adapter.
Cloud Storage vs Pen drives




• The pen drives gave us the opportunity to load
  our files wherever we are, with their minimum
  size and its speed accelerated in file
  sharing, this little device, soon became very
  popular among students, workers and many
  others who need to carry digital files, but these
  devices will be soon outdated.
Cloud Storage vs Pen drives
• Now is the time for cloud storage. It means
  that, you store your files online, and need not
  carry any encumbrance or running any risk of
  losing it, not to mention the virtual file does not
  spoil, it sits there, on the server space, directly
  on the internet, unlike the pen drives.
Disadvantages Of Cloud Storage:
• The disadvantages are, you need a device
  with an internet connection to access your
  files and invasion of their files by hackers.
Pen Drive as RAM
How to use USB Drive as RAM ?
 Step 1: Plug your USB Drive into your PC /
  Laptop. It will be recognized automatically.
 Step 2: Right click on My Computer >
  Properties.
 Step 3: Go to Advanced tab
Pen Drive as RAM

• Step 4: In
  Performance
  section, Click on
  Settings > Advanced
  tab.
Pen Drive as RAM
• Step 5: Under Virtual memory, Click on
  Change




• Step 6: Select your USB Drive
Pen Drive as RAM

• Step 7: Click on Custom
  Size and enter the size (in
  MB) you want the USB
  RAM to be (example: 2000
  MB = 2 GB).
Pen Drive as RAM
• Step 8: Click on Set > Ok and Restart your
  computer.




• After Restarting your computer you'll see
  noticeable improvement in speed.
Windows in Pen Drive
• Step 1 : select the Windows 8 ISO when
  asked to pick an ISO image from the
  computer.




• Using “windows USB bootable download tool”
Windows in Pen Drive
• Step 2 :Next, select to copy the contents to an
  USB drive. The program will copy all files to
  the drive and make that drive bootable at the
  same time.
• Step 3: Once this is done, restart your PC, get
  into the BIOS by pressing F8/F12 as per your
  manufacturer and goto the Boot Configuration
  section and enable the USB Booting as well
  as make USB Booting primary in the booting
  preference.
• Save the settings and exit the BIOS.
Windows in Pen Drive
• Step 4:On restart, the computer should now
  automatically boot through the pen drive and
  begin the installation.
Pen Drive as Camcorder
• This ball-point pen is a high-definition video
  recorder . With simple operation, elegant
  design, small size, it is easy to carry.
Pen Drive as Data Cards
• 3G modem is small USB device like pen drive
  which can be used for accessing internet in
  your laptop or desktop by inserting with your
  mobile phone GSM sim card
Other Uses
World‟s Best Pen drive ever
Pen drive way to iPhone
Amoeba Modular USB
    Flash Drive
World‟s Smallest Pen drive
Top 5 Pen Drives
Pen drives in future
Pen drives in future
References
• „Intel Light Peak: Overview‟, Intel
  Corporation, February 25, 2010.
• http://www.apple.com/thunderbolt/
• www.usb.org/home
• en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Serial_Bus
• en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB Flash Drive
Pendrives (USB)

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Pendrives (USB)

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. USB Flash Drive • USB Flash Drives or commonly called as Pen Drives are popular removable storage media having a storage capacity up to 256 GB. • It is a kind of memory card that can be plugged into a computer‟s USB port. • They are preferred best storage device because they are faster, smaller and have a longer life span. • These USB mass storage supported natively by modern operating systems such as Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.
  • 4. History • Flash memory was invented by Toshiba in 1984, but the first commercial flash drive was released by Intel in 1988. • IBM was the first North American seller of a USB flash drive, and marketed an 8 MB version of the product in 2001 “DiskOnKey“ under brand name “ThumbDrive”. • Lexar can also lay claim to a pioneering USB flash drive product named as “Compact Flash”. • Lexar offered a companion card reader and USB cable that eliminated the need for a USB hub.
  • 5. History (Cont.,) • The first flash drives were made in sizes of 8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB, and 64 MB. • These were marketed as "a true floppy-killer", and this design was continued up to 256 MB. • Netac Technology of China also holds a USB flash technology which it has licensed to various manufacturers including the USB direct factory.
  • 6. History (Cont.,) Compact Flash DiskOnKey NETAC TECHNOLOGY
  • 7. History (Cont.,) • By improvements in this technology now means that we can offer a 64GB model to our customers. This is 8,000 times larger than the original IBM USB. • In this time there have been 3 USB standards.  USB 1.0  USB 2.0  USB 3.0
  • 9. Versions of USB • USB 0.7: Released in November 1994. • USB 0.8: Released in December 1994. • USB 0.9: Released in April 1995. • USB 0.99: Released in August 1995. • USB 1.0 Release Candidate: Released in November 1995. • USB 1.0 released in January 1996 • USB 1.1 released in August 1998 • USB 2.0 released in April 2000 • USB 3.0 released in November 2008
  • 11. Internal Structure • The important parts of the pen drive are USB connector, crystal oscillator, memory chips and a controller to interact with the PC. • IC SK6211 is a controller which facilitates the data communication between the PC/Laptop and the flash memory (EEPROM) of the pen drive. • This controller IC can interface with all kind of NAND EEPROM. • The operating system provides inbuilt libraries to be installed before using these devices.
  • 12. Internal Structure(Cont.,) • The chip is a NAND type flash memory chip which has fast read, write and erase cycles. • The storage capacity of this memory is 2GB. There is another similar chip with storage capacity of 2GB on the other side. • A pen drive consists of memory element, normally a flip-flop. • A group of 4 flip-flops together stores 4-bit number. • Similarly, a group of 8*10^9 flip-flops can store 1GB of data. • A group of 8,000 Million flip-flops are embedded on a single Silicon Chip to form 1GB pen drive.
  • 13. File Systems • Flash drives ship preformatted with the FAT12, FAT16. FAT32, or ExFat file systems. • Also, standard FAT maintenance utilities (e.g., ScanDisk) can be used to repair or retrieve corrupted data. • The drive can be reformatted to any file system supported by the host operating system.
  • 14. File Systems • Even Distribution: USB flash drives have this 'wear leveling' feature built into the software controller to prolong device life, while others do not, so it is not necessarily helpful to install one of these file systems. • Defragmenting: Flash drives can be defragmented and that defragmenting shortens the life of the drive by making many unnecessary writes.
  • 15.
  • 16. ReadyBoost • ReadyBoost was introduced in Windows Vista, where it was a heavily promoted feature. • Unfortunately, ReadyBoost isn‟t a silver bullet that will make your computer faster, although it may be useful in some limited circumstances only. • Ready Boost works in conjunction with SuperFetch. When you launch an application, computer reads its files from memory, which is faster, instead from disk, which is slower.
  • 18. ReadyBoost • SuperFetch works with a USB stick – that‟s ReadyBoost in action. • When you connect a USB drive to your computer and enable ReadyBoost, Windows will store SuperFetch data on your USB drive, freeing up system memory so this can theoretically improve your system‟s performance.
  • 19. ReadyBoost • ReadyBoost probably won‟t improve your computer‟s performance much. If you have a very small amount of RAM (512 MB or so) and a very fast USB drive, you may see some increase in performance.
  • 20.
  • 21. Types of USB • Generally USB are classified based on its connectors. • It can be differentiated as MALE and FEMALE.  USB A-Type  USB Mini-b (5-pin)  USB B-Type  USB Mini-b (4-pin)  Micro-USB A  USB 3.0 A-Type  Micro-USB B  USB 3.0 B-Type  Micro-USB AB  USB 3.0 Micro B
  • 22. USB A-Type • A-style connector is a flat, rectangular interface. • The A-socket connector provides a "downstream" connection that is intended for use solely on host controllers and hubs. • It was not intended for use as an "upstream" connector on a peripheral device. • A-A cables are used to connect USB devices with an A-style Female port to a PC or another USB device, and for data transfer between two computer systems.
  • 23. USB B-Type • The B-style connector is designed for use on USB peripheral devices. • The B-style interface is squarish in shape, and has slightly beveled corners on the top ends of the connector. • The B-socket is an "upstream" connector that is only used on peripheral devices. Because of this, the majority of USB applications require an A-B cable.
  • 24. Micro-USB A • This USB can be found on newer mobile devices such as cellphones, GPS units, PDAs and digital cameras. • Micro-USB A is physically smaller in size, while still supporting the high speed transfer rate of 480 Mbps and On-The-Go features. • The connection can be easily identified by its white- colored receptacle and compact 5 pin design.
  • 25. Micro-USB B • This USB can also be found on newer mobile devices such as cellphones, GPS units, PDAs and digital cameras. • Micro-USB B is smaller in size, while still supporting the high speed transfer rate of 480 Mbps and On-The- Go features. • The connection can be easily identified by its black- colored receptacle and compact 5 pin design.
  • 26. Micro-USB AB • This versatile USB can accept either a Micro-USB A or Micro-USB B cable connection. • This interface can be easily identified by its gray-colored receptacle and compact 5 pin design. • This connector type only exists as a receptacle for On-The-Go devices and will not exist on a cable.
  • 27. USB Mini-b(5-pin) • USB type-B, which its size is almost a half inch on each side. This made it unsuitable for many devices such as PDAs, digital cameras, and cellphones. • As a result, USB Mini-b has came. This 5-pin Mini-b is the most popular style. This USB is quite small, about two- thirds the width of an A-type USB. • It is also specified for use in the newer standard called USB On-The-Go which allows peripheral devices to communicate with the presence of a host controller.
  • 28. USB Mini-b(4-pin) • This unofficial USB is found on many digital cameras, especially certain Kodak® models. • It resembles the shape of standard B-type USB, with beveled corners; however it is much smaller in size. USB Mini-b(Fuji): • This is another unofficial USB also widely used on digital cameras especially certain models manufactured by Fuji®.
  • 29. USB 3.0 A-Type • This A-Type USB is commonly found on host controllers in computers and hubs. • The A-socket connector provides a "downstream" connection that is intended for use solely on host controllers and hubs. • It is similar in to the A-Type connector used in USB 2.0 & USB 1.1. • The USB 3.0 A-type has additional pins. The USB 3.0 designed for SuperSpeed applications. • These are often blue in color to help identify them from previous versions.
  • 30. USB 3.0 B-Type • USB 3.0 B-Type is found on USB 3.0 devices. • This connector is designed to carry data and power in USB SuperSpeed applications. • Cables with this USB are not compatible with USB 2.0 or USB 1.1 devices. • But, USB 3.0 devices with this connection type can accept previous USB 2.0 and 1.1 cabling.
  • 31. USB 3.0 Micro-B • The USB 3.0 Micro B is found on USB 3.0 devices. • This connector is designed to carry data and power in USB SuperSpeed applications. • Cables with this connector are not compatible with USB 2.0 or USB 1.1 devices.
  • 32. USB Vs PS/2 USB PS/2 • (USB) is a computer • PS/2 is a connector port connector that was used on computer developed in 1996. peripherals such as • It existed alongside keyboards and mice. competing ports such as • The technology was serial and PS/2. developed in 1987 by IBM • Advantages of USB, such as an alternative to serial as a smaller physical ports. footprint and faster speed, • The dedicated connection • In May 2011, it is the for a keyboard and mouse dominant connection port freed serial ports for use installed on laptops, with other devices. computers etc.,
  • 33. Advantages Advantages: • Durable solid state for transporting data from one location to another. • The near ubiquity of USB support on modern PCs means that such a drive will work in most places. • The cheapest of Flash Drives will store dozens of floppy disks worth of data; some hold more data than a CD; top Flash Drives can hold data more than a DVD. • Most modern OS can read & write to flash drivers without any additional device drivers.
  • 34. Disadvantages Disadvantages: • They can sustain only a limited number of write & erase cycles before failure. • Write operations will gradually slow as the device ages. • They can be damaged or have data corrupted if an impact loosens circuit connection.
  • 35.
  • 36. Errors in USB drive • Pen Drive not detected • Pen Drive disabled at office or college • Problem in removing pen drive • Virus affect in pen drive • Problem in formatting pen drive • Delayed Write failed error • Disable data writing on pen drive
  • 37. Errors in USB drive “USB device not Recognized” • The problem occur due to wrong registry entries. (i.e.) you need to delete UpperFilters and the LowerFilters registry values. Open Start >> Run, and type “regedit”. • Locate UpperFilters registry value. – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetContr olClass{4D36E980-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318} – Click on Edit menu, and select Delete and click OK. • Locate LowerFilters registry value. – HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetContr olClass{4D36E967-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318} – Click on Edit menu, and select Delete and click OK.
  • 38. Errors in USB drive
  • 39. Errors in USB drive “Pen Drive disabled” • Windows will now show a New Hardware Wizard to install the drivers but it is disabled. • This is because: – 1. By Disabling USB Ports from Device Manager. – 2. By Un-installing the USB Mass Storage Drivers.
  • 40. Errors in USB drive “Generic volume cannot be stopped right now” • When you try to eject a USB pen-drive by using “Safely Remove Hardware > Safely remove USB Mass Storage device” option, windows should stop all the read-write operations on the drive so that the drive can be removed. • But sometimes it shows a error message. • This is because, some file on your pen drive is in use by some other program on that computer. • So close all such files or applications and try removing the drive.
  • 41. Errors in USB drive “Virus affect in Pen Drive” • Virus always creates a autorun.inf file which is a system, hidden and a read only file on your pen drive. • When user double clicks on the pen drive files pointed by the autorun.inf got executed which copies the virus files on your system. • E.g. New Folder.exe
  • 42. Errors in USB drive • In order to protect your pen drive from viruses you need to create a blank file named autorun.inf through notepad and place it in the root directory.
  • 43. Errors in USB drive “Problem in formatting Pen Drive” • When they try to format the pen drive, It shows error “Windows was unable to complete the format". • It is due to : – Virus or Trojan infection. – Corrupted flash chips on the pen drive – Fake pen drives
  • 44. Errors in USB drive “Delayed Write failed error” • “Windows delayed write failed - Windows was unable to save all the data for the file M:$Mft. The data has been lost. This error may be caused by a failure of your computer hardware or network connection. Please try to save this data elsewhere.” • Open My Computer, right click on the USB drive, click on properties. – Go to Tools > Error-checking – This will show a window like the one below. Check the check-boxes to Automatically fix the file system and Scan for and attempt recovery of bad sectors. Click Start.
  • 45. Errors in USB drive
  • 46. Errors in USB drive “Write Protected” • Registry Editor by typing regedit in Run dialog. • Navigate to the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlS etControl • Right click on “Control” key -> New -> Key. Name it “StorageDevicePolicies” without quotes. • Now right click on this newly created key and then click New -> DWORD value and name it as “WriteProtect”.
  • 47. Errors in USB drive
  • 48.
  • 49. “Light Peak” • Thunderbolt is an optical cable interface for connecting peripheral devices to a computer via an expansion. • Originally codenamed Light Peak and developed by Intel, with technical collaboration of Apple in 2009. • Light Peak can be at least twice as fast as USB 3.0, also known as Super-speed USB. • It can deliver bandwidth starting at 10 Gigabits per second, with the potential to extend to 100 Gb/s.
  • 50. “Light Peak” • At its lowest speed, it means you could transfer a full-length Blu-Ray movie in less than 30 seconds. • “This year, major PC and accessories makers are introducing products that use USB 3.0, whose data transfer rates of 4 Gb/s is up to ten times faster than USB 2.0.But optical technology that drives Light Peak can do better.” -Intel.
  • 51. Introduction • Thunderbolt™ technology is a transformational high- speed, dual protocol I/O innovation, provides flexibility and supports data (PCI Express) and HD display (DisplayPort) connections over a single cable. • It can chain up to six thin profile systems and devices like Laptops and Ultrabooks. • 10 Gbps of full duplex bandwidth per channel.
  • 52. Daisy-Chain HD Display Data storage Laptop • Devices in Daisy chain connection supported. • Hotplug Ready
  • 53. Protocol Architecture • Thunderbolt technology is based on a new architecture with full-duplex links. • Thunderbolt port is capable of providing the full bandwidth of the link in both directions. • No sharing of bandwidth between ports or between upstream and downstream directions.
  • 54. Protocol Architecture (cont.,) • The Thunderbolt protocol physical layer is responsible for link maintenance including hot- plug detection, and data encoding to provide highly efficient data transfer. • The heart of the Thunderbolt protocol architecture is the transport layer.
  • 55. Protocol Architecture (cont.,) • DisplayPort and PCI Express protocols are mapped onto the transport layer. • Mapped protocol packets between a source device and a destination device may be routed over a path that may cross multiple Thunderbolt controllers.
  • 57. • February 24, 2011 – MacBook Pro update • Mini display port • USB 2.0 + Thunderbolt
  • 58. • MacBook Pro side panel • Thunderbolt port • Thunderbolt cable
  • 60. USB v1.0 • Released in January 1996 • USB 1 specified data rates of 1.5 Mbit/s (Low- Bandwidth) and 12 Mbit/s (Full-Bandwidth). • Few USB devices made it to market until USB 1.1, released in August 1998, which fixed problems identified in 1.0, mostly relating to hubs.
  • 61. USB v2.0 • Released in April 2000. • Added higher maximum signaling rate of 480 Mbit/s (effective throughput up to 35 MB/s or 280 Mbit/s) (now called “‟Hi-Speed”). • Became popular due to cost/benefit advantage • E.g. IEEE 1394 – high bandwidth, low cost.
  • 62. USB v3.0 • Also referred to as SuperSpeed USB. • Speeds 10x faster than 2.0 • Transfer of 25 GB file in approx. 70 seconds. • Optimized power efficiency • Backward compatible with USB 2.0 • USB 2.0 device will work with USB 3.0 host • USB 3.0 device will work with USB 2.0 host
  • 64. Wireless USB • WUSB is a form of USB technology that uses radio-frequency (RF). • WUSB technology is based on the WiMedia Ultra-Wideband common radio platform. • WUSB can provide transfer rates up to 480 Mbps (at 3 m) or 110 Mbps (at 10 m). • WUSB also allows for no more then 127 devices connected to a single host controller.
  • 65. USB 3.0 Vs Others USB 3.0 Developed by "Firewire“ eSATA ExpressCard (5Gbps) is Intel, the standard by successfully standard for theoretically 10Gb/s bi- Apple address the the increased 10 times directional developers, issue of the speed faster than interface is has interface requirements USB 2.0. A technically repeatedly bottleneck, of today's 5400-rpm PCI Express sent mixed and allowed mobile portable drive on a cable. It messages fast hard technologies. reaching can support with the drives.eSATA Closely tied to 100MB/s. both hubs as ditching of supports a both the PCI It has High well as a Firewire first data rate of Express and bandwidth. daisy chain of from iPods. 3.2Gbps. USB 3.0 up to 7 specifications devices.
  • 66.
  • 67. USB CELL • USB rechargeable batteries are from Moixa. • USB rechargeable batteries that you will be able to use over and over again without them ever running out. • Just bust out your laptop and start charging the batteries, and you will be up and running again in a jiffy.
  • 68. Bluetooth USB • Conversion Bluetooth PC into Bluetooth enabled. • Wireless connect to Bluetooth devices such as mobile phones, PDA or PC, for data transfer, networking, and dial-up, fax. • Enabling wireless connection to Bluetooth headset. • Supporting Bluetooth voice data. • Supporting multi languages. • Bluetooth 2. 0 USB Adapter.
  • 69. Cloud Storage vs Pen drives • The pen drives gave us the opportunity to load our files wherever we are, with their minimum size and its speed accelerated in file sharing, this little device, soon became very popular among students, workers and many others who need to carry digital files, but these devices will be soon outdated.
  • 70. Cloud Storage vs Pen drives • Now is the time for cloud storage. It means that, you store your files online, and need not carry any encumbrance or running any risk of losing it, not to mention the virtual file does not spoil, it sits there, on the server space, directly on the internet, unlike the pen drives. Disadvantages Of Cloud Storage: • The disadvantages are, you need a device with an internet connection to access your files and invasion of their files by hackers.
  • 71. Pen Drive as RAM How to use USB Drive as RAM ?  Step 1: Plug your USB Drive into your PC / Laptop. It will be recognized automatically.  Step 2: Right click on My Computer > Properties.  Step 3: Go to Advanced tab
  • 72. Pen Drive as RAM • Step 4: In Performance section, Click on Settings > Advanced tab.
  • 73. Pen Drive as RAM • Step 5: Under Virtual memory, Click on Change • Step 6: Select your USB Drive
  • 74. Pen Drive as RAM • Step 7: Click on Custom Size and enter the size (in MB) you want the USB RAM to be (example: 2000 MB = 2 GB).
  • 75. Pen Drive as RAM • Step 8: Click on Set > Ok and Restart your computer. • After Restarting your computer you'll see noticeable improvement in speed.
  • 76. Windows in Pen Drive • Step 1 : select the Windows 8 ISO when asked to pick an ISO image from the computer. • Using “windows USB bootable download tool”
  • 77. Windows in Pen Drive • Step 2 :Next, select to copy the contents to an USB drive. The program will copy all files to the drive and make that drive bootable at the same time. • Step 3: Once this is done, restart your PC, get into the BIOS by pressing F8/F12 as per your manufacturer and goto the Boot Configuration section and enable the USB Booting as well as make USB Booting primary in the booting preference. • Save the settings and exit the BIOS.
  • 78. Windows in Pen Drive • Step 4:On restart, the computer should now automatically boot through the pen drive and begin the installation.
  • 79. Pen Drive as Camcorder • This ball-point pen is a high-definition video recorder . With simple operation, elegant design, small size, it is easy to carry.
  • 80. Pen Drive as Data Cards • 3G modem is small USB device like pen drive which can be used for accessing internet in your laptop or desktop by inserting with your mobile phone GSM sim card
  • 82.
  • 83. World‟s Best Pen drive ever
  • 84. Pen drive way to iPhone
  • 85. Amoeba Modular USB Flash Drive
  • 87. Top 5 Pen Drives
  • 88. Pen drives in future
  • 89. Pen drives in future
  • 90. References • „Intel Light Peak: Overview‟, Intel Corporation, February 25, 2010. • http://www.apple.com/thunderbolt/ • www.usb.org/home • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Serial_Bus • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB Flash Drive