Printers, Webcams, Graphic Tablets, Game controllers, some mice and keyboards, Flash drives...
Basically anything.
Usb devices
It is the software that contains the driver for your flasdrive ccid(Chip/Smart Card Interface Devices)
Yes, you can use a USB microphone with an audio interface by connecting the USB microphone to the audio interface's USB port. This allows you to benefit from the audio quality and features of the interface while using the convenience of a USB microphone.
In theory a single hub of USB can support 127 devices. In practice, this will not actually occur. Most computers do not have enough power to drive that many devices. A reasonable number would be about 20.
A USB input device refers to any peripheral that connects to a computer or other devices via a USB (Universal Serial Bus) interface and is used to provide input. Common examples include keyboards, mice, and game controllers. These devices allow users to interact with the computer, sending commands or data for processing. USB input devices are popular due to their ease of use and plug-and-play functionality.
A USB midi interface is used for various things, such as accessing files stores on a USB. You can also use it to connect to a computer that allows for various systems operations.
Probably USB ( universal serial bus) to which you can attach any number of devices including storage .
Any USB devices as long as the computer has USB Ports. Plugging new USB devices in old computers (older than 3-5 years) might not work as newer devices might use a newer USB version. Generally this rarely happens, I never had an issue of a USB device not working on a computer with USB.
It allows to use USB hot-swappable devices, the data transfer is not that bad, and supports huge number of devices.
An input interface card
generally USB
The primary difference is that a USB interface type printer requires the computer to have a USB port (as all modern computers do) whereas a parallel interface type printer requires the computer to have a parallel (LPT) port (which many modern computers do not have.) There are USB-to-parallel converters however which plug into USB and allow the use of parallel printers. Additionally, many legacy applications only have support for parallel printers, in these cases, in order to use a USB printer it may be necessary to create a virtual parallel port and map the USB printer to it.