These days most new Macs come with FireWire and USB connectivity options. And
most peripherals are available in either flavor. So, given a choice, which should
you choose? Well, several factors are involved, but helping you out is what we're
here for, so let's examine the matter more closely:
What's USB and Why Should You Care?
USB is a cross-platform industry standard for connecting peripherals to
computers. The standard offers a 12-MB-per-second data transfer rate--which is
pretty darn fast, though not earth shattering. In theory, USB offers the ability
to connect up to 127 devices to a single computer (though we've never heard of
anyone actually doing this). Although USB was developed for the Wintel world,
Apple has become one of its major proponents. In fact, its inclusion on the iMac
helped spur the widespread acceptance of the technology.
USB is hot swappable, eliminating the need to reboot or restart your Mac when
attaching a device. You attach peripherals through interconnected external hubs.
When your Mac's ports fill up, just attach a hub that provides additional ports
(usually four or seven), and keep on plugging in more peripherals--and hubs--as
needed. With USB, there's no need for terminators, memory addresses or ID numbers
with USB devices. There's only one kind of cable (USB A-B), which has different
connectors at each end, so you can't connect a USB device incorrectly.
Various sorts of devices can plug into a USB port: Digital cameras, printers,
Zip drives, SuperDisk drives, floppy drives, mice, keyboards, and many other
peripherals.
To make matters worse, USB 2.0 is looming on the horizon. In February of
1999, Intel announced that they were creating a consortium of companies to bring
USB to faster speeds, and allow it to compete with IEEE-1394 FireWire. The USB
2.0 spec is supposed to allow USB to utilize the full range of devices including
cameras, drives, and other things that USB was never intended to work with. This
is quite a shift from the original goal of USB, which was to provide connectivity
for low- to medium-speed devices, such as we've already mentioned. Intel and its
USB 2.0 consortium buddies plan to ramp up USB speeds 40 fold or more, going from
12Mbps to 480Mbps.
Despite the fact that there are still technical hurdles to leap, USB 2.0
won't be supported by motherboard chipsets--in other words, appearing on a
computer near you--for probably another year, at least. Then it will be longer
still until peripheral manufacturers jump aboard.
What's FireWire and Why Does it Matter?
FireWire (a.k.a. IEEE 1394) is a high-performance connection standard for
personal computers and consumer electronics that makes USB look sluggish.
FireWire can move large amounts of data between computers and peripheral devices
at transfer rates of 100, 200, and 400Mbps (12.5, 25 and 50 megabytes per second,
respectively). In simpler terms, it's a heck of a lot faster than USB.
At such speeds, you could, for instance, plug in a digital camcorder and
transfer video data into your Mac as a pure digital signal without going through
the usual digital-to-analog and analog-to-digital conversion process. FireWire
also supports device-to-device transfers for which you'd not even need your
computer. Want to transfer digital video data from your digital camera or
camcorder to a digital VCR? No problem--if the manufacturers of such devices
build them to take advantages of FireWire's capabilities.
Like USB, FireWire is hot pluggable; up to 63 devices (using cable lengths up
to 14 feet) can be attached to a single bus and connected and disconnected as
needed. FireWire cables are easy to connect because there's no need for device
IDs, jumpers, DIP switches, screws, latches, or terminators.
FireWire speeds up the movement of multimedia data and large files and
enables the connection of digital consumer products--including digital
camcorders, digital videotapes, digital videodisks, set-top boxes, and music
systems--directly to your computer. The technology allows for video capture
directly from both new DV camcorders with built-in FireWire ports, and from older
analog-only equipment using A/V to FireWire converters.
FireWire was developed with streaming digital media in mind. The technology
allows for isochronous transport, meaning that any two devices on the bus can
have guaranteed bandwidth through which to pass data.
Besides the aforementioned products, you can also get FireWire-savvy
scanners, storage devices, printer interface cards, A/V converters, digital audio
mixers, and printers. Of course, you may not have the time, desire, or, most
importantly, money to indulge in such extravagances, but, hey, it's possible.
FireWire Verses USB
While FireWire sounds like USB on steroids, the technologies serve different
purposes. FireWire--a much cleaner and more advanced spec than USB--is for
peripherals that need maximum bandwidth. USB is a medium bandwidth connection for
peripherals such as digital still cameras, monitors, keyboards, and mice.
The crucial feature favoring FireWire is the isynchronous data feature. If
you have external data drives (ZIP, SuperDisk, Orb, etc.) plugged into the same
hub as your printers, scanners and other peripherals, you could have unforeseen
trouble. Several ComputerUser editors have lost data when writing to external
drives while printing. Though you can have up to 127 devices daisychained
together, the safe thing to do is use one peripheral at a time. FireWire, on the
other hand, allows your peripherals to multitask without risk of data loss.
But with USB 2.0 looming on the horizon, will FireWire wilt and fade? Not
likely. Our prediction is that, even if version 2.0 does what's being promised,
the two standards will peacefully coexist into the foreseeable future. It seems
doubtful that USB 2.0 will encroach too much on digital video and audio territory
that FireWire has slowly but surely conquered.
Why? Because FireWire can transfer data point-to-point (one device to
another) while USB requires the computer to server as a go-between. In other
words, moving data with USB means you have to move it from one doohickey to your
computer, then transfer it from the computer to the other doohickey. FireWire can
move data directly from one device to another. Plus, FireWire will soon hit
speeds of 800Mbps, late this year or early in 2001. And there's speculation of
speeds of up to 1.6Gbps available a year or two down the road.
With all this in mind, should you choose USB or FireWire peripherals?
FireWire is superior in all other ways. All other factors being equal, the only
reason to prefer USB over FireWire is price.
With all their extra pizzazz, FireWire peripherals are a bit pricier than
their USB cousins. How much? Let's look at two examples: PPS Inc. makes a 4x4x24x
CD-RW USB drive that costs about $300. Its closest equivalent with FireWire
connectivity costs $100 more, but is 8x4x32x. VST makes an external USB 6GB hard
drive that costs $370. Its external FireWire 6GB hard drive is $440.
Still, FireWire is, well, on fire. James Snider, the chairman of the 1394
Trade Association, said the standard is now "exploding" onto the worldwide
electronics markets. "1394 will be available on almost 40 percent of all new PCs
this year, as the PC expands its role in networking and consumer applications,"
he said. "All new camcorders made after 2000 will have 1394. Peripherals such as
printers, scanners and hard drives are coming out with 1394 now, and digital
still image systems represent a very popular application of the technology."
Contributing Editor Dennis Sellers writes for several Mac-centric
publications.