5 meters or about 16 feet
The usb cable extension is made by another usb cable. The cable is made with one usb connecter and 1 usb connecter. You can simple attach the extender cable to your usb.
It really depends on the USB device and the type of cable you use to extend it. The USB specification states that with a passive USB cable you cannot extend a device more than 16 feet. There are active extension cables than can be used to extend devices beyond that distance. Depending on the type of extender you use, you can actually extend the device hundreds of feet away. There are active USB cables with in-line repeaters and there are extenders that will use custom length Cat5e cable for the extension.
a usb cable has four wires, two for power and two for communication.
The minimum length available for a micro usb cable is 3 mm. The micro usb cable is considered to be far more durable that the mini usb cable. You can purchase a micro usb cable at Staples.
There is no distinction between a USB 1.1 and a USB 2.0 cable. A USB cable can be operated at either speed. If I took an A to B USB cable from 1995, I could use it with the newest devices on the market with no problem.
USB cables do come in different lengths depending upon the device that is used with it. USB cables range from 3-5 meters, but do not extend beyond 5 meters.
Monster Cable is known for there quality USB cables.
The term USB stands for 'Universal Serial Bus'. USB cables are some of the most popular cable types available, used mostly to connect computers to peripheral devices such as cameras, camcorders, printers, scanners, and more. USB cables are fast, transferring up to 480Mbps. Twisted pair cable is used in USB cable.
Depending on the brand of your camera you can get the usb cable directly from their website. Radio Shack also carries camera usb cables.
USB cables typically go up to twelve feet.
24AWG / 4 Conductor Shielded Cable
A Sony PSP component video cable is needed. It connects the A/V output on the PSP to an RCA Component video and analog audio on a TV.
I think standard USB cables are limited to 5 metres. But you can of course make it longer by connecting several cables together.
No. The USB cables are not all compatible with all I-Pods.
You can usually get by with just a mini-USB to USB cable.
As in any live recording applications, the more length you add to cables, the more noise that cable tends to pick up. Try to keep cable lengths to a minimum. If that is not possible, give it a shot and see how the recording sounds. You may want to try an XLR microphone application as XLR cable are shielded to reject unwanted noise*. *XLR cables may still pick up unwanted noise when running them at long lengths.
Look at the ends of the cables. USB 2.0 cables have rectangular shaped, flatter ends. USB 1.0 cables have thick square ends.2 Test data transfer speed. Connect a device with each cable and try to move files back and forth from the device and your computer. A USB 2.0 cable is up to 40 times faster at transferring data.3 Recall when you received each cable. USB 2.0 cables are the new standard as of 2001, so any USB 1.0 cable you have most likely came with a pre-2001 device.