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| IEEE-1394 (FIREWIRE) | |||||||||||||
| FireWire is a high-speed serial
communication standard defined by IEEE 1394. It was originally designated by
Apple, where the name "FireWire" came from. Sometimes it has also been referred
to as iLINK (a Sony branding initiative). With a 400 Mbps bandwidth, FireWire
can be used to connect high-speed devices such as video camcorders, audio
recorders, and external storage devices. The theoretical limit for the
bandwidth is 400 Mbps (or 800 Mbps with FireWire 800), although actual
throughput is slightly slower. A FireWire bus is self-powered (FireWire
peripherals can derive power from the bus, eliminating the need for a separate
power cord, only 6 pin and 9 pin connectors carry the power). The bus
configures itself automatically (not requiring device IDs or terminators); and
it is hot-pluggable (one can connect and use a FireWire peripheral via a simple
modular connector without having to restart the computer). FireWire replaced SCSI as Apple's standard high-speed interface beginning with the blue G3 PowerMac; PCI cards and PC Cards can bring FireWire ports to PCI PowerMacs and PowerBook G3's, respectively. FireWire Digital Video (DV) camcorders, digital still cameras, and analog-digital video converters are already available, with mass storage devices (hard drives, magneto-optical drives, high-capacity removable drives, tape drives, and CD/DVD drives) and printers mostly still to come. ![]()
Devices on the bus are Hot-Swappable.
Transmitting data over CAT 5 cable allows data at 100Mbps to travel 100 Meters (1394b). PCMCIA FireWire cards do not provide power so peripherals like the iPod would need their own external power supply. | |||||||||||||
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