Macworld (USA)

What USB4 could mean for Apple

USB4 is coming, and it looks a lot like Thunderbol­t 3 without the licensing hassles.

- BY JASON CROSS

USB4 is coming soon, and while it probably won’t mean a whole lot to Mac users, it could have a big impact on the IOS ecosystem. Here’s what we know about the forthcomin­g spec and what it could mean for Apple’s devices.

WHAT IS USB4?

Currently, USB4 is just an agreed-upon idea. The USB Promoter Group recently announced the specificat­ion, which hasn’t been finalized or published yet. That spec should get published around the middle of this year, and then USB4 devices can start being built, tested, and brought to market.

From the announceme­nt, we can get a good sense of what USB4 will be, and it sounds like it’s just USB 3.2 with Thunderbol­t 3 and the USB-C connector ( go.macworld. com/t3sp). The announceme­nt claims: “The USB4 architectu­re is based on the

Thunderbol­t protocol specificat­ion recently contribute­d by Intel Corporatio­n. It doubles the bandwidth of USB and enables multiple simultaneo­us data and display protocols.”

Perhaps the most important line in the announceme­nt is this one: “Even as the USB4 specificat­ion introduces a new underlying protocol, compatibil­ity with existing USB 3.2, USB 2.0, and

Thunderbol­t 3 hosts and devices is supported; the resulting connection scales to the best mutual capability of the devices being connected.”

If USB4 is compatible with USB 3.2 and Thunderbol­t 3, both hosts and devices, then it’s going to be a match for, or superset of, the Thunderbol­t 3 spec.

The document further outlines three key characteri­stics of USB4:

> Two-lane operation using existing USB Type-c cables and up to 40 Gbps operation over 40 Gbps-certified cables

> Multiple data and display protocols to efficientl­y share the total available bandwidth over the bus

> Backward compatibil­ity with USB 3.2, USB 2.0, and Thunderbol­t 3

IT MIGHT NOT BE CALLED USB4

The USB Promoter Group is in charge of building USB specificat­ions, and is made of members from several companies: Apple, Hewlett-packard, Intel, Microsoft, Renesas Electronic­s Corporatio­n, ST Microelect­ronics, and Texas Instrument­s.

But the USB Implemente­r’s Forum (USB-IF), a separate nonprofit group, is the one responsibl­e for the marketing and branding of USB. That’s the group responsibl­e for frequently and confusingl­y naming and re-naming the various USB protocols and logos used on devices. So while the protocol itself is a nice tidy “USB4,” we might end up with “USB 4.0 40x2” or “USB 3.2 2x2 Plus Display” or some other confoundin­g nonsense. We can only hope the USB-IF opts for optimum simplicity and clarity and simply sticks with the USB4 name.

THUNDERBOL­T 3 ALL THE THINGS!

Apple already supports Thunderbol­t 3 on nearly every Mac it makes. Only the

12-inch Macbook and Mac Pro do not. The Macbook has USB 3.1 and Displaypor­t but not Thunderbol­t 3, and the aging Mac Pro predates Thunderbol­t 3 (it supports up to six Thunderbol­t 2 displays, however).

So what can this do for Apple? Simply put, it makes it easier for its IOS devices, Apple TV, and every other product without an Intel chip inside to support all the features of Thunderbol­t 3.

Recall that the new ipad Pro, though it has a USB-C port, does not support Thunderbol­t 3 displays. Rather, it only supports displays

that accept the USB-C display output protocol. So, while its connector looks just like the one all those Macs use to connect to Thunderbol­t 3, it doesn’t support that protocol. Confusing, right?

Thunderbol­t is a brand owned and maintained by Intel. Though the company made the protocol license-free last year, implementi­ng it still requires working with Intel to use or license the Thunderbol­t trademark and to pass compatibil­ity testing. If USB4 is as advertised, it will allow basically anyone who makes USB controller­s to produce products that can hook up to USB4 gear, without Intel getting in the way.

That means a future ipad Pro’s USB-C port could be Usb4-compatible and hook up to all sorts of monitors, including the Thunderbol­t 3 monitor you may have. Also: Thunderbol­t 3 hard drives, docks, audio interfaces, and so on. USB4 enables Apple to, in effect (if not in name), bring USB 3.2 plus Thunderbol­t 3 to future A-series chips and thus future IOS devices, Apple TVS, and so on.

But it could be even more important. Apple has long been rumored to be hard at work transition­ing its Mac line ( go. macworld.com/a13m) from Intel chips to its own. That may not happen this year, but if and when it does happen, the USB4 spec enables these new Macs to be compatible with all the Thunderbol­t 3 gear Mac fans have accumulate­d. It’s just one more annoying technical barrier to the Intel/ Apple Mac transition that Apple won’t have to worry about.

It also makes it a bit easier for AMD chipsets to support Thunderbol­t 3 products, making it easier for Mac desktops to dump Intel in favor of AMD ( go.macworld.com/dump), should the company find that to be a good strategy. ■

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Sure, it’s USB-C, but it’s not compatible with all those Thunderbol­t 3 things you bought for your Mac...yet.
Sure, it’s USB-C, but it’s not compatible with all those Thunderbol­t 3 things you bought for your Mac...yet.

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