I recently purchased a Toshiba external hard drive to move some stuff from my daughters tiny 20G HD on her Inspirion 2650. This is a USB 2 device, and I assumed the USB ports on the computer were also. I guess not. I got a message from XP saying the ports couldn't provide enough power to the device. I saw the drive had a socket for a DC power supply, so I plugged in the appropriate voltage wall wart. I immediately smelled burning circuitry, so I unplugged it. The USB ports smell like a burned electrical device and they no longer work when I plug in the USB mouse or a memory stick. I'm going to have to pull the MB and see if I can find a fuse to replace. Anyone done this?
You have burned the USB ports, and i doubt theres a fuse for this.you plugged the AC adapter in so it was getting its full voltage from that plus the extra voltage from your USB and you have fried the circuitry.
They work with any computer that has a USB port, to a USB device.
Yes, a SCSI device can be attached to a USB port. The SCSI device will have a small rectangular piece on the side that you can insert into the USB port opening.
No, older USB devices do not run faster when connected to a new USB port. The speed of the device is determined by the device itself, not the port it is connected to.
I am not going to answer you because I hate you!
Usb port
First try moving the device to another USB port!!! Check that the usb device is functional in the Device Manager. some USB devices don't appear in Device Manager use the utility program that came bundled with the device to check for errors.
Put a known good device in that port...process of elimination!
You can plug in any device with USB, such as a USB stick or an external hard disk.
You can plug in any device with USB, such as a USB stick or an external hard disk.
If you mean a USB device, no sorry
The USB 2.0 and 3.0 device will work. USB 3.0 is backwards compatible with USB 2.0.
You check if a usb device e.g. flash memory works in a good port. If it works, do that in the port you'd like to determine and see if your device is found.