USB 3.0 is planned to support a maximum transfer rate of 4.8 Gbit/s, with 3.2 Gbit/s being a more reasonable typical transfer rate.
USB 3.0 is capable of data transfers up to 5 gigabits per second. In practice you can reasonably expect 3.2 gigabits per second or more (around 400 megabytes per second).
The USB 3.0 specification increases bandwidth and transfers data between devices close to 10 times quicker than its predecessor.
4Mbps.
the answer is USB 2.0 High Speed
Data Transfer Rates states the maximum speed at which data can be read/write onto the storage disk.
The ISP allows, or can provide, up to 100mbps of data transfer between your computer/connected devices, to anything else.
Data transfer rate (also called bandwidth)
disk rotational speed in RPM
disk rotational speed in RPM
It is used for high speed serial connection data transfer for devices such as camcoders, camera's, etc.
It is a hard drive data transfer standard. It is supported by most year 2000 and newer mainboards. It has a transfer speed of a maximum of 100MB per second.
802.11a, the maximum data rate is up to 54Mbps 802.11b, the maximum data rate is up to 11Mbps 802.11g, the maximum data rate is up to 54Mbps 802.11n, the maximum data rate is up to 150Mbps
Around 35MB/s 35 Mega Bytes per second
Data transfer rate (also called bandwidth)