Usingthis table, you can now identify which type of USB ports are on your PC. Here is an example of a USB 3.0 port on our PC: USB 3.0 blue ports From Logo. Another way to know which USB port is available on your computer, you can check out the logo beside the port, and cross-reference it from the logos given in the table above.
Notsure if a device, cable, or port is USB 3.0? A good indication of compliance is when the plastic surrounding the plug or receptacle is the color blue.
USB2.0 is the slowest typically found today, at just 480Mbps. USB 3.0 ports, officially now known as USB 3.2 gen 1 ( we know, itβs confusing ), are often USB-A type and are blue to make them
. #4. Hmm, looks ok. I'd try a Clear CMOS. Unplug all USB devices except the keyboard on one of the problematic ports and see if you can navigate the BIOS with it (determining if it has anything to do with Windows or if it's hardware-level).
Mostlaptops should have the USB3.0 ports as blue, as part of USB-IF's (the people who designed USB) marketing plan. The only sure way is to either check the
Ihave just bought a new HP Prodesk 400 G4 and confused by the hardware manual and PC! The manual says the two front USB and the two below the RJ45 rear are USB2, with the group of 4 on the rear as USB3 but the USB smybols suggest the front two are USB3.0, with the two below the RJ45 as USB2.0 (but with with a keyboard symbol as
. 326 34 336 110 210 206 242 99 77
are all usb 3.0 ports blue