• @Brandon@lemm.ee
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    3110 months ago

    Can someone please explain how this is possible? What advancements on the tech tree did we have to make to double the bandwidth which we couldn’t previously?

    • Turkey_Titty_city
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      10 months ago

      It’s the protocols more than anything.

      stuff with this speeds existed already, it just wasn’t via USB. it was expensive proprietary protocols and hardware and cables. USB is an open standard design for consumer use, and not for giant corps with datacenters who can pay $2,000 for a single data cable.

      Thunderbolt is basically a data-transfer focused version of USB, and just requires a different controller that supports the new protocols to achieve the higher speeds.

      multiplexing is one way to achieve higher bandwidth and throughput over the same physical cable.

    • Ghostalmedia
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      2510 months ago

      From what I recall, the big change is in the signal encoding. It’s switching from PAM2 to 3, which will allow a lot more data to move down the line without having to totally rethink the cables and connectors. Although you will need new cables for this.

    • @weedazz@lemmy.world
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      1410 months ago

      We made breakthroughs in recent yeara at harvesting alien technology from the crashed Roswell ships, leading to all of these “AI chips” and crazy speeds

  • ZephyrXero
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    2510 months ago

    USB 4 can already do 80 gbit, why are they even bothering with a competing standard anymore?

    • Hypx
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      2310 months ago

      That’s USB4 v2.0, not USB4. It’s not the same thing.

        • @kvadd@lemmy.world
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          1810 months ago

          Oh, let me introduce you to our lord and savior Microsoft!

          Windows 1, Windows 2, Windows 3, Windows 95, Windows NT, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows ME, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, 8, 9, 10, 11.

          And then we have the magic that is Xbox:

          Xbox, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Xbox One S, Xbox One X, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series X

          • Morphit
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            10 months ago

            Windows 9

            Woah, that’s sounding a bit too logical, there.

            Even better is that the Windows 11 version number isn’t 11, it’s 10.0.22000.

              • Johanno
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                610 months ago

                Reason was that old naming schemes from 95 and 98 messed up their shit.

            • @tony@lemmy.hoyle.me.uk
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              710 months ago

              Windows 95 was version 3.95 because returning 4.0 from the GetVersion api broke loads of software that was doing stupid checks.

              People then started hardcoding checks for 3.95…

              GetVersion has been deprecated completely now…

            • MrScottyTay
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              210 months ago

              That’s cause 11 is mostly the same as 10 under the hood barr a few additions. But is mostly regarded as just a better front-end for 10

          • @Molecular0079@lemmy.world
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            510 months ago

            God I hate the entire industry of marketing and sales and this is one of the reasons why.

            Even worse is when Apple decides to just name everything the same thing and get rid of numbers entirely.

          • @Voyajer@lemmy.world
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            310 months ago

            You’re also missing 8.1 if we’re going by Microsoft’s wish of calling a service pack a whole new version of Windows.

    • @sznio@lemmy.world
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      1310 months ago

      Can you connect PCI-E devices to USB 4? That feels like the only useful feature of Thunderbolt imo.

  • @MooseBoys@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Can we just switch to fiber interfaces already? TB5 apparently has a one-meter maximum passive cable length, compared to TB4’s already short two meters.

    • @kalleboo@lemmy.world
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      1610 months ago

      Thunderbolt optical cables exist if you need them, and for anyone who doesn’t the extra cost of the optical interface is a waste.

    • Dfy
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      1310 months ago

      But then you would need fiber glass cables, put it in your bag/pockets by itself and you have to buy another one

    • @stevehobbes@lemmy.world
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      310 months ago

      You still need copper unless you don’t want to transmit power too.

      Interestingly, fiber technically has more latency than copper - light moves slower through fiber than electrons through copper.

  • @stevestevesteve@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Does anything even use thunderbolt 4’s bandwidth? About the only thing I’ve seen is external GPUs and even that is a ludicrously niche use case.

    I’d be much more excited about a post about something using TB4 to its fullest. All I can think reading this title is “who cares?” Is someone going to make a reasonably priced and even remotely convenient 40gbps ethernet card for TB5? No. Do my NVME drives go past 40gbps? Generally not, but I could’ve seen use for fast drives plugged into tb4/5 at least. Is anyone using TB4/5 for datacenter interconnects where this speed would actually be useful? I doubt it.

    Does anyone reading this post use tb4 on a daily basis and feel limited in any way?

    • @stevehobbes@lemmy.world
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      110 months ago

      Storage and creative use cases, 100%. If you have several TBs coming off each camera per day, you will 100% feel the pain.

      Just driving two 4K monitors at 40Gbps is pretty much all of the bandwidth of TB3, assuming you’re doing 10b 120hz.

      A modern NVMe can easily do 50-60Gbps per drive.

      • @stevestevesteve@lemmy.world
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        110 months ago

        Driving two 4k monitors at 10b120hz is pretty overkill to use thunderbolt for, is kind of my point. Is anyone actually being limited by that?

        Even with cameras, the storage generally isn’t that fast. CFexpress cards cant generally break 2GB/s, and even 8+k cameras generally record to that or maybe USB-C (and if you’re recording to a USBC device you’re probably just gonna use USBC instead of thunderbolt).

        NVMe that can do sustained write speeds like that will be full in a few minutes, unless you’re offloading to a massive high speed array over 10+gbit networking it just kind of seems like why bother?

        Don’t get me wrong, I like the idea of going to faster interfaces for the sake of speed, but I have experienced almost zero real use of thunderbolt in real life, and I usually keep a pretty good eye out. My real question was mostly focused on whether there are people actually using thunderbolt and if they’re actually limited by 40gbps and I’m kinda just bitching at this point

        • @stevehobbes@lemmy.world
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          19 months ago

          Enterprise NVMe drives can do sustained writes of 7GB/s no problem. That’s 58Gbps plus overhead.

          That’s to a single drive.

          If you are a film crew connecting and ingesting multiple raw 8k 120hz video to be edited, this is very useful

          As to whether they use USB4 v2 or thunderbolt, I’m not sure it matters. They look pretty similar, but with thunderbolt it’s very easy to know what the interface is capable of. Good luck when something says “USB 4”.

          USB-C is just a connector - thunderbolt uses the exact same connector.

  • @Techmaster@lemm.ee
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    510 months ago

    Why is Intel technology coming to Macs next year when Macs no longer use Intel chips? That makes no sense.

    • @SimplePhysics@sh.itjust.works
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      2410 months ago

      Intel and Apple co-developed ThunderBolt, and the tech is free to use for all manufacturers, so why wouldn’t they? One more selling point on the spec sheet is always good.

      • @Techmaster@lemm.ee
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        310 months ago

        If it was free to use then AMD would support it too. I didn’t realize Apple was involved with it too, I thought it was Intel’s IP. Weird for them to work together on that and then Apple gives Intel the finger like they did.

        • @__dev@lemmy.world
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          410 months ago

          If it was free to use then AMD would support it too

          They do. There’s thunderbolt motherboards and it’s coming with USB-4 on the new 7000-series mobile chips.

        • paraphrand
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          10 months ago

          I believe I read rumors that Intel wants to be a US manufacturer of Apple Silicon chips someday down the road. Sharing the role with TSMC.

      • Flying Squid
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        110 months ago

        Really, my question is why ThunderBolt isn’t more widely adopted?

        • @SimplePhysics@sh.itjust.works
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          710 months ago

          My guess is the cost of Thunderbolt compatible hardware, which explains why only premium devices (ie Macs) have TB ports. TB cables are also much more expensive than the average USB-C.

          • Flying Squid
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            110 months ago

            That’s true. I didn’t consider the cost. Good point.

    • @__dev@lemmy.world
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      410 months ago

      Apple still uses intel chips in all their macs, just not for the CPU. The M1 Macbook for instances uses an Intel JHL8040R thunderbolt 4 chip.

    • paraphrand
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      10 months ago

      Apple’s part of the group backing AV1, along with Intel too. Huh.

  • Obinice
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    110 months ago

    Apple really done want to just adopt the global standards of USB, do they xD

    Anything they can do to feel special and squeeze more money out of their customers, forcing them to remain in a proprietary ecosystem and buy more stuff that only works with Apple products, etc