Foursquare: Here’s A Solution to Your PleaseRobMe Problem
March 11, 2010 – 12:50 PM | 0 Comments

By now you have probably heard of PleaseRobMe a service which aggregates all of the foursquare check-in’s into one place using the tweets sent out through the application.  There has been a lot of uproar …

Read the full story »
Geek

Read about the latest geek trends, news, and gadgets right here!

Malware Report

Learn about the latest threats online, how to remove them, and even how to prevent them.

Software

Find all the latest and greatest software out there for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Twitter

Keep up with the latest from one of the web’s hottest sites (twitter.com).

Video

Never miss another of my videos again – view the latest videos from live.besttechie.net!

RSS FeedEmail SubscriptionsTwitterYouTubeFacebook
buzz_button

Home » Hardware, Linux
    Share/Bookmark

Linux Claims The First USB 3.0 Drivers

Submitted by Matt Hodges on June 11, 2009 – 4:42 PM0 Comments
Linux Claims The First USB 3.0 Drivers

After what is said to have been a year-and-a-half of work, it appears that the first driver for USB 3.0 has been born.  Was it created for Microsoft Windows?  Nope.  How about Mac OS X?  Not quite.  As it turns out, Intel’s Sarah Sharp has created the world’s first USB 3.0 driver; and it’s for Linux.

The announcement came from her blog post on June 7th, stating “[it is] queued [for] the patches for 2.6.31, so Linux users should have official USB 3.0 support around September 2009.” So Linux will be the first operating system to have official USB 3.0 support.

So what does this mean for end users?  Unfortunately, not a whole lot—yet.  In order to utilize the soon-to-be new standard, users need two additional things:

  1. Onboard (or PCI-express or peripheral) USB 3.0 host controller
  2. USB 3.0 devices, such as iPods, flash drives, and the like

As a commenter from Digg.com pointed out:

“Am I the only one who finds it depressing that someone spent a year and a half making drivers for things that don’t exist?”

This is a valid point indeed.  Driver software does little good if you can’t use it with anything.  Fortunately, NEC is slated to release 1 million xHCI PCI express add-in cards in September, which takes care of one of the requirements.  As for when we’ll begin to see devices that actually use USB 3.0, only time will tell.  No major hardware manufacturer has released any information signaling that USB 3.0 devices are on the horizon.  For the early adapters, let’s hope for sooner rather than later.

The same commenter from Digg also left the remark:

“[These are] drivers that will immediately be made obsolete once a big company makes a USB 3.0 device.”

The statement is true and false.  Yes, it is correct that when you buy your future USB 3.0 featured iPod, Apple will ship it with its own drivers that you can install.  But let’s not forget that USB is supposed to be Plug-N-Play, with one-driver-fits-all.  Also, recall that this driver was written for the Linux kernel—not for Windows or OS X.  Most companies do not produce hardware drivers for Linux anyway; so who knows, Sarah’s work may stick.  And like everything else Linux, they are completely open source, and can be downloaded here.

Regardless of the near future, this is a major win for Linux and the FOSS community!  Way to go everyone, you beat the big boys on this one!  Now let’s see some devices that handle those 4+ Gigabit speeds!

Related Products:

You Say More Than You Think: Use the New Body Language to Get What You Want!, the 7-day Plan
Milwaukee 2401-22 12-Volt Li-ion Sub-Compact Driver Kit
TEC Plus 460 cc Ti Matrix Driver Men's (Right-Handed)
Driver
The Driver

You might also like:

BestTechie Advertising Special!

Windows vs Linux (The Security Wars)

Creative SoundBlaster Fatal1ty Review

Half-Life 2 Review

Tags: , ,