With a USB-C connection, you can change your Windows 11 PC or connect to other USB Type-C devices, such as mobile phones, docking stations, display adapters, and other devices with USB-C ports. The Universal Serial Bus (USB) port is probably the most typically used and also conveniently identifiable PC connectivity common found on modern-day hardware. But as global as the rectangle-shaped port and also its various data transfer requirements are, things have changed with the introduction of USB Type-C. The smaller-sized, reversible, oval Type-C connector is positioned to become the best port for both commercial and industrial computer systems, making the dream of a legitimately global link requirement, at least partly, a fact. Yet like any kind of tech change, there's plenty of area for complication with USB Type-C. Quality isn't helped by the USB 3.0/ 3.1/ 3.2 as well as currently USB4 transfer standards. So what exactly is USB Type-C? Exactly how is it far better than its predecessors, Type-A, and Type-B? View our Tech Side video on the subject, or maintain reading to discover. What is USB Type-A? One of the most usual and also familiar USB adapter shapes is USB Type-A, which is currently utilized on the substantial bulk of computer tools and also peripherals. It is additionally used on several other tools, including those that use its Mini-An and Micro-A versions (see the image over). Acquiring appeal in the mid '90s, common USB Type-A connectors are rectangular and also have a unique top and also bottom. This requires them to be oriented correctly in order to be plugged in. What is USB Type-B? The lot more square-shaped USB Type-B is somewhat much less typical but is electrically similar to USB Type-A ports. USB Type-B ports are regularly made use of on printers, though they can additionally be located on some displays and also USB centers. The Mini-B and also Micro-B connectors, like their Type-A counterparts, are discovered on a wide range of electronics, from tablet computers and also handheld general practitioner devices to mobile phones. What Is USB Type-C? Type-C describes the physical shape of the most recent USB port. (The USB Type-C connector shouldn't be puzzled with the USB 3.1 or USB 3.2 criteria.). USB Type-C Cable The USB Type-C port is smaller than both Type-An and also Type-B, oval-shaped, symmetrical, and reversible, suggesting there is no "upside-down" to connect it. This gets rid of among the most typical problems with USB Type-A. This most recent USB connector is planned to replace the various other existing USB form factors and give a future-proof, fully-featured choice for equipment developers to standardize on. USB Type-C ports are becoming increasingly more usual on mobile devices and custom hardware. On the other hand, the industrial computer (IPC) market is simply beginning to mess around with incorporating USB Type-C ports into the most recent generation of business gadgets. Ultimately, we ought to keep in mind that while USB Type-An and also USB Type-B have actually generally been composed using the words "type" as revealed, USB Type-C is progressively being created as just USB-C. It's likewise important to keep in mind that the USB Type-C charging port will be mandated in the EU beginning in 2024. This new law is a part of a broader EU initiative to make products more sustainable, minimize digital waste, as well as make customers' lives simpler. The initial stage applies to tiny electronics like cellular phones, digital video cameras, and also much more. Medium electronic devices, such as laptop computers, have up until 2026 to apply USB-C for charging. Breaking Down USB Information Transfer Rates It's important to make the difference between an offered USB port kind element (like Type-A or Type-C) and the data transfer rates and also power shipment readily available over that port. The criteria that determine the performance of USB are instead shared as a numerical value, like USB 2.0, 3.1, 3.2, or 4. The USB 1.0 spec (introduced in 1996) supplied an optimum data transfer rate of 12 Mbps (Megabits per second). USB 2.0 maxes out at 480Mbps. USB 3.0, 3.1, and 3.2 are a little extra complex. What is the distinction between USB 3.2 Gen 1 vs Gen 2 and also USB 3.2 Gen 2 × 2? What concerning USB4? Let's break it down: USB 3.2 Gen 1 is utilized to be called USB 3.0 and also offers a transfer price of 5 Gbps, which is about 10 times faster than the USB 2.0 requirement. USB 3.2 Gen 2, released in July 2013, utilized be called USB 3.1 as well as uses a transfer rate of 10 Gbps over the existing USB-An and also USB-C ports-- twice the price of USB 3.2 Gen 1. USB 3.2 Gen 2 × 2, launched in September 2017, is readily available only for USB Type-C connectors making use of two-lane operation. It offers 20 Gbps transfer speeds. USB4 was revealed in March 2019. It leverages the Thunderbolt 3 procedure and also offers transfer speeds of 40 Gbps. (Note that the right requirements name is USB4 as defined by the USB programmers. It is typically identified as USB 4 with an area.). Long name, simple concept: a line of rugged industrial touch screen monitors with just one port (by Conrad H. Blickenstorfer) Industrial displays come in many shapes and forms. And sometimes there is a need for one that's not only tough and rugged enough to stand up to use and abuse, but that is also easy to clean and disinfect, looks clean and elegant like a modern consumer tablet, and — drum roll — needs just one single cable for power and video. USB Type-C makes that possible. And Winmate has a whole range of such displays, with screens measuring from 7 to 18.5-inches. The Winmate USB Type-C display The review unit Winmate sent us was the W10L100-GCH2-C USB Type-C display. From the front, it looks like a modern tablet, but that's quite deceptive. This display is all cast aluminum and steel and tough as an anvil, definitely designed for demanding industrial use. The display measures 10.1 inches diagonal and has a 1280 x 800-pixel resolution. That makes for 149 PPI (pixels per inch), plenty sharp enough for its intended use. The display offers near-perfect viewing angles from all directions, without any color or contrast shifts. Luminance is 350 nits, also good enough for indoor industrial and assorted other applications. An 800 nits version of this panel is also available (see here). All this display has (and needs) in terms of I/O is a single USB Type-C port. Nothing else. That means one single thin cable for power, video, audio, and whatever else goes back and forth between a PC and its display. As for buttons, there's a small push-control pad in the rear, mostly for basic setup and viewing customization. The USB Type-C cable that came with our setup was 6-1/2 feet long. USB-C cables can be up to twice that long for simple USB 2.0 data transfer. Faster USB 3.1 setups mean shorter cables. For the USB 3.1 Gen 2 that supports 10gbps, cable lengths are limited to about three feet. The power of USB Type-C USB Type-C's immediate and most obvious advantage over the original USB Type-A connector is the smaller and reversible plug. No more 50/50 chance that you're trying to plug a cable in the wrong way! How could that be done? In essence, while the original standard USB Type-A plug has just four pins (ground, voltage, and two data pins), USB Type-C has those four pins on both of its 12-pin rows, so it doesn't matter which way the plug goes in. It seems a simple thing, but given how frustrating the Type-A plug is and how easy to damage it is by trying to force it in the wrong way, the Type-C plug is indeed a major step forward. There is, however, much more to USB Type-C than that. While the reversibility of the USB Type-C connector comes from having not one but two sets of an expanded 12-pin layout, "USB Type-C" itself only describes the physical design of the smaller, reversible connector itself; it is the version of USB that determines what capabilities a cable with USB Type-C connectors have. Those capabilities can be simple legacy USB 1.0/2.0 or "SuperSpeed" 3.0 or 3.1 data transfer. But there are also so-called alternate modes that allow standard USB Type-C connectors to deliver power and carry non-USB data by using some of the extra pins in the USB 3.1 standard. As of now, there are alternate mode specifications for DisplayPort, HDMI, Thunderbolt, and MHL (Mobile High-Definition Link). This is why this Winmate USB Type-C display needs just one thin USB-C cable to handle power, video, and sound. But isn't power through USB fairly limited, just enough to charge a smartphone or tablet battery? Not with USB Type-C. USB Type-C technology can supply as much as 100 watts, plenty enough to drive a 10-inch touchscreen display such as the W10L100-GCH2-C which needs way less than that. That said, the USB Type-C port on the computer the W10L100-GCH2-C is plugged into must support 5V/3A. Below are the pin assignments for the W10L100-GCH2-C's USB 3.1 Type-C connector: Bottom line: Winmate USB Type-C Solution What began as a much-appreciated solution to a decades-old annoyance — a better USB connector — has grown into a versatile connectivity solution that reduces the number of cables. Fewer cables are always better, and with its innovative USB Type-C solutions, Winmate is putting this new interface technology to productive work. And that is where Winmate's rugged USB Type-C displays come in. Available in seven sizes ranging from 7 to 18.5 inches diagonal, these high-quality displays get their video, audio, USB, and power all through a single thin cable