TEAC CD-W552PUK USB 2.0

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Zardon at DH sends word that he's thrown up his latest TEAC CD-W552PUK USB 2.0 review for your reading pleasure! Here's a snip.

CD writers are taken for granted nowadays with almost every machine having one as standard. But is there really that much of a difference from drive to drive, and really what is the point of having a USB2 external drive? Well, Personally I have always fancied the idea of having an external drive to move from machine to machine without the need of opening them up, removing drives and configuring IDE slave and master settings.

I guess a little background on USB2 is called for, USB Hi-Speed is another name for USB 2.0. The official USB Promoter Group didn?t want the new USB 2.0 specification to be seen as a completely new standard, which may confuse consumers. Therefore, USB 2.0 becomes USB Hi-Speed, and USB 1.1 gets a new title as USB Basic Speed. USB 2.0 has a raw data rate at 480Mbps, and it is rated 40 times faster than its predecessor interface, USB 1.1, which tops at 12Mbps. Originally, USB 2.0 was intended to go only as fast as 240Mbps, but then, USB 2.0 Promoter Group increased the speed to 480Mbps in October 1999.

With speed 40 times more than that of USB 1.1, USB 2.0 broaden the range of external peripherals that can be used on a computer. Even with multiple high-speed peripherals connected to a USB 2.0 bus, the system will less likely to hit the bandwidth bottleneck. The new specification also inherits the current USB?s Plug and Play and hot-swapping capability as well as providing backward compatibility for USB 1.1 hardware, allowing existing user base to upgrade seamlessly. Basically, USB 2.0 includes everything that USB 1.1 offers and adds a high-speed mode, which runs at 480Mbps. USB 1.1 supports two speed modes: 1.5 and 12Mbps whereas USB 2.0 has three of them: 1.5, 12 and 480Mbps. USB 2.0 also uses the same USB 1.1 compliant cables to connect high-speed devices. However, classic USB hubs will slow down USB 2.0 devices. In addition, a USB 2.0 host controller is required to enable the high-speed connection with a USB 2.0 device.

TEAC CD-W552PUK USB 2.0 Review