What does “This port is for data transfer only” mean in relation to USB-C graphics output? ...

Random body shuffle every night—can we still function?

I can't produce songs

My mentor says to set image to Fine instead of RAW — how is this different from JPG?

A `coordinate` command ignored

"klopfte jemand" or "jemand klopfte"?

After Sam didn't return home in the end, were he and Al still friends?

How to write capital alpha?

Why not send Voyager 3 and 4 following up the paths taken by Voyager 1 and 2 to re-transmit signals of later as they fly away from Earth?

How many time has Arya actually used Needle?

Is there public access to the Meteor Crater in Arizona?

Sally's older brother

In musical terms, what properties are varied by the human voice to produce different words / syllables?

Caught masturbating at work

Asymptotics question

Why is it faster to reheat something than it is to cook it?

Central Vacuuming: Is it worth it, and how does it compare to normal vacuuming?

Monty Hall Problem-Probability Paradox

Does the Mueller report show a conspiracy between Russia and the Trump Campaign?

Flight departed from the gate 5 min before scheduled departure time. Refund options

Moving a wrapfig vertically to encroach partially on a subsection title

Is multiple magic items in one inherently imbalanced?

The Nth Gryphon Number

Does silver oxide react with hydrogen sulfide?

Mounting TV on a weird wall that has some material between the drywall and stud



What does “This port is for data transfer only” mean in relation to USB-C graphics output?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Toshiba Satellite Radius 12 USB-C PortDocking station vs USB ports in the back of the monitorAdaptor that allows me to use a PCI card via a USB connectionWhy would a USB device behave differently when plugged into different ports?Why does my Startech SV231 USB KVM Only work with some devicesWhy UASP isn't being usedExternal Graphics card on a dual USB 3.0 LaptopWhy does USB 3.1 only use two of the four available data lines?Can I use a USB-C laptop dock with a USB-A to USB-C connector on a laptop that DOES NOT support USB-C docksIs it possible to check if the dedicated gpu is active or not + being monitored? (Nvidia Optimus)MacBook Pro (Early 2011) to USB 3.0





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ height:90px;width:728px;box-sizing:border-box;
}







4















According to the technical specifications for the Asus ZenBook Flip 14 UX461UN, and the manual, they all say this about the USB-C 3.1 port:




This port is for data transfer only.




General question: What are they trying to say it won't do?



Specific question: This laptop comes with a dedicated graphics card capable of 4K, and I'm looking to get a type of pseudo-docking station via USB-C, which would provide 4K Video/Audio and USB for HIDs. Is this possible, or is the dedicated graphics card not connected to USB-C in that way?










share|improve this question































    4















    According to the technical specifications for the Asus ZenBook Flip 14 UX461UN, and the manual, they all say this about the USB-C 3.1 port:




    This port is for data transfer only.




    General question: What are they trying to say it won't do?



    Specific question: This laptop comes with a dedicated graphics card capable of 4K, and I'm looking to get a type of pseudo-docking station via USB-C, which would provide 4K Video/Audio and USB for HIDs. Is this possible, or is the dedicated graphics card not connected to USB-C in that way?










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4


      0






      According to the technical specifications for the Asus ZenBook Flip 14 UX461UN, and the manual, they all say this about the USB-C 3.1 port:




      This port is for data transfer only.




      General question: What are they trying to say it won't do?



      Specific question: This laptop comes with a dedicated graphics card capable of 4K, and I'm looking to get a type of pseudo-docking station via USB-C, which would provide 4K Video/Audio and USB for HIDs. Is this possible, or is the dedicated graphics card not connected to USB-C in that way?










      share|improve this question
















      According to the technical specifications for the Asus ZenBook Flip 14 UX461UN, and the manual, they all say this about the USB-C 3.1 port:




      This port is for data transfer only.




      General question: What are they trying to say it won't do?



      Specific question: This laptop comes with a dedicated graphics card capable of 4K, and I'm looking to get a type of pseudo-docking station via USB-C, which would provide 4K Video/Audio and USB for HIDs. Is this possible, or is the dedicated graphics card not connected to USB-C in that way?







      usb nvidia-graphics-card






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 29 '18 at 1:17







      tudor

















      asked Nov 26 '18 at 0:58









      tudortudor

      5431519




      5431519






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2





          +50









          Based on the statement, "This port is for data transfer only." I highly suspect that the USB-C port is not using USB Alternate Modes. USB Alternate Mode is what is used to carry DisplayPort or Thunderbolt signals over USB-C. There would also be a physical internal connections to these chipsets to allow the transferring of that data. That port is most likely only connected to the USB controller. Therefore, you could not use it to connect an external monitor.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

            – tudor
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:45











          • @tudor you are correct

            – Keltari
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:52



















          0














          There’s no such thing as a USB 3.1 data-only port that is compliant with all
          the standards.
          However, some manufacturers use cheaper USB ports, by only implementing some of
          these standards.



          One of the most common omissions is that of power charging, since data transfer
          alone needs less power than does charging.
          One can see this more clearly by examining USB Type-C cables, which
          by definition should offer up to 10Gbps data rates and 100 watts of power.
          However, many cheap USB cables designed for data transfer can only supply
          about 10Wh of power, insufficient for many devices such as the Apple MacBook or
          Google Chromebook Pixel 2 that charge at 29Wh.



          USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer. Users of USB 3.0 devices
          devices can purchase adapters allowing them to use the newer USB 3.1 Gen 1,
          but again, for data transfer only.
          My opinion is that the specifications of the Asus ZenBook mean just that:
          The USB 3.1 port is only a frontal adapter to older (and cheaper) USB 3.0
          hardware.



          A full implementation of the USB 3.1 standard means the USB port can do a lot of things: Data transfer, video and charging. The Thunderbolt 3 specification piggybacks on USB 3.1 ports, meaning that manufacturers like Apple can make computers with USB 3.1 ports that are also Thunderbolt ports.



          "USB 3.1 Gen 1 (data transfer only)" means therefore the USB 3.1 protocol,
          but at half the speed and without video, charging, or Thunderbolt capabilities.
          As most USB 3.X devices can negotiate capabilities with the port or the cable,
          most USB 3.1 devices using data transfer will still function,
          but at lower levels of performance.






          share|improve this answer
























          • "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 21:55











          • USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

            – harrymc
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:16













          • Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:25













          • I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

            – harrymc
            Dec 2 '18 at 8:08











          • If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

            – tudor
            Dec 2 '18 at 22:57












          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "3"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: true,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: 10,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1378338%2fwhat-does-this-port-is-for-data-transfer-only-mean-in-relation-to-usb-c-graphi%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          2





          +50









          Based on the statement, "This port is for data transfer only." I highly suspect that the USB-C port is not using USB Alternate Modes. USB Alternate Mode is what is used to carry DisplayPort or Thunderbolt signals over USB-C. There would also be a physical internal connections to these chipsets to allow the transferring of that data. That port is most likely only connected to the USB controller. Therefore, you could not use it to connect an external monitor.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

            – tudor
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:45











          • @tudor you are correct

            – Keltari
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:52
















          2





          +50









          Based on the statement, "This port is for data transfer only." I highly suspect that the USB-C port is not using USB Alternate Modes. USB Alternate Mode is what is used to carry DisplayPort or Thunderbolt signals over USB-C. There would also be a physical internal connections to these chipsets to allow the transferring of that data. That port is most likely only connected to the USB controller. Therefore, you could not use it to connect an external monitor.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

            – tudor
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:45











          • @tudor you are correct

            – Keltari
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:52














          2





          +50







          2





          +50



          2




          +50





          Based on the statement, "This port is for data transfer only." I highly suspect that the USB-C port is not using USB Alternate Modes. USB Alternate Mode is what is used to carry DisplayPort or Thunderbolt signals over USB-C. There would also be a physical internal connections to these chipsets to allow the transferring of that data. That port is most likely only connected to the USB controller. Therefore, you could not use it to connect an external monitor.






          share|improve this answer













          Based on the statement, "This port is for data transfer only." I highly suspect that the USB-C port is not using USB Alternate Modes. USB Alternate Mode is what is used to carry DisplayPort or Thunderbolt signals over USB-C. There would also be a physical internal connections to these chipsets to allow the transferring of that data. That port is most likely only connected to the USB controller. Therefore, you could not use it to connect an external monitor.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 29 '18 at 1:34









          KeltariKeltari

          51.8k18119171




          51.8k18119171













          • Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

            – tudor
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:45











          • @tudor you are correct

            – Keltari
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:52



















          • Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

            – tudor
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:45











          • @tudor you are correct

            – Keltari
            Nov 29 '18 at 1:52

















          Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

          – tudor
          Nov 29 '18 at 1:45





          Ah, I see. USB-C can carry HDMI and/or DisplayPort, so what they mean is they've only connected it to the USB hub, just like their other USB3.1 ports. So the connector is just a connection advantage and not a functional one. They may as well have provided 3 type-A ports as it really doesn't do anything more.

          – tudor
          Nov 29 '18 at 1:45













          @tudor you are correct

          – Keltari
          Nov 29 '18 at 1:52





          @tudor you are correct

          – Keltari
          Nov 29 '18 at 1:52













          0














          There’s no such thing as a USB 3.1 data-only port that is compliant with all
          the standards.
          However, some manufacturers use cheaper USB ports, by only implementing some of
          these standards.



          One of the most common omissions is that of power charging, since data transfer
          alone needs less power than does charging.
          One can see this more clearly by examining USB Type-C cables, which
          by definition should offer up to 10Gbps data rates and 100 watts of power.
          However, many cheap USB cables designed for data transfer can only supply
          about 10Wh of power, insufficient for many devices such as the Apple MacBook or
          Google Chromebook Pixel 2 that charge at 29Wh.



          USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer. Users of USB 3.0 devices
          devices can purchase adapters allowing them to use the newer USB 3.1 Gen 1,
          but again, for data transfer only.
          My opinion is that the specifications of the Asus ZenBook mean just that:
          The USB 3.1 port is only a frontal adapter to older (and cheaper) USB 3.0
          hardware.



          A full implementation of the USB 3.1 standard means the USB port can do a lot of things: Data transfer, video and charging. The Thunderbolt 3 specification piggybacks on USB 3.1 ports, meaning that manufacturers like Apple can make computers with USB 3.1 ports that are also Thunderbolt ports.



          "USB 3.1 Gen 1 (data transfer only)" means therefore the USB 3.1 protocol,
          but at half the speed and without video, charging, or Thunderbolt capabilities.
          As most USB 3.X devices can negotiate capabilities with the port or the cable,
          most USB 3.1 devices using data transfer will still function,
          but at lower levels of performance.






          share|improve this answer
























          • "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 21:55











          • USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

            – harrymc
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:16













          • Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:25













          • I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

            – harrymc
            Dec 2 '18 at 8:08











          • If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

            – tudor
            Dec 2 '18 at 22:57
















          0














          There’s no such thing as a USB 3.1 data-only port that is compliant with all
          the standards.
          However, some manufacturers use cheaper USB ports, by only implementing some of
          these standards.



          One of the most common omissions is that of power charging, since data transfer
          alone needs less power than does charging.
          One can see this more clearly by examining USB Type-C cables, which
          by definition should offer up to 10Gbps data rates and 100 watts of power.
          However, many cheap USB cables designed for data transfer can only supply
          about 10Wh of power, insufficient for many devices such as the Apple MacBook or
          Google Chromebook Pixel 2 that charge at 29Wh.



          USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer. Users of USB 3.0 devices
          devices can purchase adapters allowing them to use the newer USB 3.1 Gen 1,
          but again, for data transfer only.
          My opinion is that the specifications of the Asus ZenBook mean just that:
          The USB 3.1 port is only a frontal adapter to older (and cheaper) USB 3.0
          hardware.



          A full implementation of the USB 3.1 standard means the USB port can do a lot of things: Data transfer, video and charging. The Thunderbolt 3 specification piggybacks on USB 3.1 ports, meaning that manufacturers like Apple can make computers with USB 3.1 ports that are also Thunderbolt ports.



          "USB 3.1 Gen 1 (data transfer only)" means therefore the USB 3.1 protocol,
          but at half the speed and without video, charging, or Thunderbolt capabilities.
          As most USB 3.X devices can negotiate capabilities with the port or the cable,
          most USB 3.1 devices using data transfer will still function,
          but at lower levels of performance.






          share|improve this answer
























          • "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 21:55











          • USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

            – harrymc
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:16













          • Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:25













          • I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

            – harrymc
            Dec 2 '18 at 8:08











          • If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

            – tudor
            Dec 2 '18 at 22:57














          0












          0








          0







          There’s no such thing as a USB 3.1 data-only port that is compliant with all
          the standards.
          However, some manufacturers use cheaper USB ports, by only implementing some of
          these standards.



          One of the most common omissions is that of power charging, since data transfer
          alone needs less power than does charging.
          One can see this more clearly by examining USB Type-C cables, which
          by definition should offer up to 10Gbps data rates and 100 watts of power.
          However, many cheap USB cables designed for data transfer can only supply
          about 10Wh of power, insufficient for many devices such as the Apple MacBook or
          Google Chromebook Pixel 2 that charge at 29Wh.



          USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer. Users of USB 3.0 devices
          devices can purchase adapters allowing them to use the newer USB 3.1 Gen 1,
          but again, for data transfer only.
          My opinion is that the specifications of the Asus ZenBook mean just that:
          The USB 3.1 port is only a frontal adapter to older (and cheaper) USB 3.0
          hardware.



          A full implementation of the USB 3.1 standard means the USB port can do a lot of things: Data transfer, video and charging. The Thunderbolt 3 specification piggybacks on USB 3.1 ports, meaning that manufacturers like Apple can make computers with USB 3.1 ports that are also Thunderbolt ports.



          "USB 3.1 Gen 1 (data transfer only)" means therefore the USB 3.1 protocol,
          but at half the speed and without video, charging, or Thunderbolt capabilities.
          As most USB 3.X devices can negotiate capabilities with the port or the cable,
          most USB 3.1 devices using data transfer will still function,
          but at lower levels of performance.






          share|improve this answer













          There’s no such thing as a USB 3.1 data-only port that is compliant with all
          the standards.
          However, some manufacturers use cheaper USB ports, by only implementing some of
          these standards.



          One of the most common omissions is that of power charging, since data transfer
          alone needs less power than does charging.
          One can see this more clearly by examining USB Type-C cables, which
          by definition should offer up to 10Gbps data rates and 100 watts of power.
          However, many cheap USB cables designed for data transfer can only supply
          about 10Wh of power, insufficient for many devices such as the Apple MacBook or
          Google Chromebook Pixel 2 that charge at 29Wh.



          USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer. Users of USB 3.0 devices
          devices can purchase adapters allowing them to use the newer USB 3.1 Gen 1,
          but again, for data transfer only.
          My opinion is that the specifications of the Asus ZenBook mean just that:
          The USB 3.1 port is only a frontal adapter to older (and cheaper) USB 3.0
          hardware.



          A full implementation of the USB 3.1 standard means the USB port can do a lot of things: Data transfer, video and charging. The Thunderbolt 3 specification piggybacks on USB 3.1 ports, meaning that manufacturers like Apple can make computers with USB 3.1 ports that are also Thunderbolt ports.



          "USB 3.1 Gen 1 (data transfer only)" means therefore the USB 3.1 protocol,
          but at half the speed and without video, charging, or Thunderbolt capabilities.
          As most USB 3.X devices can negotiate capabilities with the port or the cable,
          most USB 3.1 devices using data transfer will still function,
          but at lower levels of performance.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 29 '18 at 9:52









          harrymcharrymc

          265k14274583




          265k14274583













          • "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 21:55











          • USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

            – harrymc
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:16













          • Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:25













          • I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

            – harrymc
            Dec 2 '18 at 8:08











          • If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

            – tudor
            Dec 2 '18 at 22:57



















          • "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 21:55











          • USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

            – harrymc
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:16













          • Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

            – tudor
            Dec 1 '18 at 22:25













          • I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

            – harrymc
            Dec 2 '18 at 8:08











          • If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

            – tudor
            Dec 2 '18 at 22:57

















          "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

          – tudor
          Dec 1 '18 at 21:55





          "USB 3.0 ports can only be used for data transfer." I think you mean USB-A. The Lenovo Yoga 730 advertises "2 x USB 3.0 Type-C (Thunderbolt 3, 1 x power delivery)" for example. lenovo.com/au/en/laptops/yoga/yoga-700-series/Yoga-730-13-/p/… So the port features appear to be entirely related to the port type (and implementation) rather than the USB protocol version as in @Keltari's answer.

          – tudor
          Dec 1 '18 at 21:55













          USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

          – harrymc
          Dec 1 '18 at 22:16







          USB-C was created at the same time as USB 3.1, so I think that "USB 3.0 Type-C" is a misnomer for "USB 3.1 Type-C". There seem to be all sorts of hybrids around, probably dating from times that standards were proposed but not yet finalized, thrown to the market by manufacturers jumping the gun to be the first. The Asus seems to have one of these hybrids: A USB 3.1 that is more like USB 3.0 underneath. Your link above seems to be another, an almost-USB 3.1 from before the standard was published.

          – harrymc
          Dec 1 '18 at 22:16















          Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

          – tudor
          Dec 1 '18 at 22:25







          Yes, they were created at the same time but they don't appear to be linked. Wikipedia, for example, lists alternate modes under USB-C and not USB3.1. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB-C#Alternate_Mode Conversely, the specification for USB3.1 doesn't require a USB-C port (e.g. "Type-A USB3.1 port" appears alot in the wild) so they appear to be independent specifications which can be mixed and matched. Do you have a reference that says the USB3.1 specification requires a USB-C port?

          – tudor
          Dec 1 '18 at 22:25















          I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

          – harrymc
          Dec 2 '18 at 8:08





          I don't think that one requires the other, except in the eyes of the marketing department. It makes marketing sense to label a port as the up and coming USB 3.1, even if it's not really, especially since you will never know the difference except for those missing capabilities. USB-C is also a useful addition to the hype. As they both came out at the same time, both became a marketing necessity. Marketing demands may drive hardware development, although we would have liked it otherwise.

          – harrymc
          Dec 2 '18 at 8:08













          If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

          – tudor
          Dec 2 '18 at 22:57





          If one doesn't require the other then there's no link between USBx.y Gen z and (port type) USB-x, so it's true that USB3.0 can only be used for data transfer because the statement would be true of all USB versions. It's the port type that dictates the modes available and not the protocol version. What's not true is that "USB 3.0 port can only be used for data transfer" because, from the way I read it and from the specifications I've seen, any manufacturer could implement Thunderbolt, HDMI, and/or power charging on a USB-C port and then use the version 3.0 protocol for data transfer.

          – tudor
          Dec 2 '18 at 22:57


















          draft saved

          draft discarded




















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid



          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1378338%2fwhat-does-this-port-is-for-data-transfer-only-mean-in-relation-to-usb-c-graphi%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Why not use the yoke to control yaw, as well as pitch and roll? Announcing the arrival of...

          Couldn't open a raw socket. Error: Permission denied (13) (nmap)Is it possible to run networking commands...

          VNC viewer RFB protocol error: bad desktop size 0x0I Cannot Type the Key 'd' (lowercase) in VNC Viewer...