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-   -   Upgrading USB Port to 2.0 (http://www.win98banter.com/showthread.php?t=51884)

[email protected] April 15th 12 12:15 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
Hi,

I have a few Win98se laptops and desktop computers.

I am a heavy user of USB flash drives, and it takes a lot of time
to transfer very large files to/from these USB flash drives due
to the older 1.0 USB ports.

Is it difficult to upgrade the USB ports to 2.0?

Thank You in advance, John


philo April 15th 12 12:39 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
On 04/15/2012 06:15 AM, wrote:
Hi,

I have a few Win98se laptops and desktop computers.

I am a heavy user of USB flash drives, and it takes a lot of time
to transfer very large files to/from these USB flash drives due
to the older 1.0 USB ports.

Is it difficult to upgrade the USB ports to 2.0?

Thank You in advance, John



On a desktop machine it's easy, all you need to do is get a PCI USB2
card. Be sure to read the specs first to make sure win98se is supported


On a laptop, the ports cannot be upgraded though

--
https://www.createspace.com/3707686

Lostgallifreyan April 15th 12 01:01 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
philo wrote in :

On a desktop machine it's easy, all you need to do is get a PCI USB2
card. Be sure to read the specs first to make sure win98se is supported


On a laptop, the ports cannot be upgraded though



There might be a way, if the laptop has a PC card slot. I wouldn't try
though, I hate laptops. :)

98 Guy April 15th 12 01:16 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
wrote:

Is it difficult to upgrade the USB ports to 2.0?


The only way I'm going to answer that question is to simply say that
there is no reason (except maybe self-hatred or masochism) why anyone
should be running any version of Windows today on hardware that does not
have USB 2.0 ports on the motherboard.

Buffalo April 15th 12 08:55 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 


wrote:
Hi,

I have a few Win98se laptops and desktop computers.

I am a heavy user of USB flash drives, and it takes a lot of time
to transfer very large files to/from these USB flash drives due
to the older 1.0 USB ports.

Is it difficult to upgrade the USB ports to 2.0?

Thank You in advance, John


I bought a pci usb 2.0 card for under $10 and it works fine. Check to see
that any card you buy will work on Win98SE. I believe you need Win98SE to
make most work.
My card was from Best Connectivity and it has 4 external USB ports and 1
internal USB port and includes drivers for Win98SE on an included CD.
Buffalo



philo[_35_] April 15th 12 10:49 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
On 04/15/2012 07:01 AM, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
wrote in :

On a desktop machine it's easy, all you need to do is get a PCI USB2
card. Be sure to read the specs first to make sure win98se is supported


On a laptop, the ports cannot be upgraded though



There might be a way, if the laptop has a PC card slot. I wouldn't try
though, I hate laptops. :)




Yep. I did not think of that one.
Though I do laptop repairs I consider it more akin to watch repair.

As to Mac laptops though, there is very little I will attempt.

--
https://www.createspace.com/3707686

Lostgallifreyan April 15th 12 11:07 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
philo wrote in :

Yep. I did not think of that one.
Though I do laptop repairs I consider it more akin to watch repair.


You have far more patience than I have. :) And it's a valid comparison. While
the screws are larger, the unusual fittings, and precision needed, aren't far
off handling a watch, which I tried a few times as a kid. Sony Walkmans are
another trial by ordeal. I threw one across a room. The owner was
sympathetic, but he could see I was more distressed than he had reason to be.
I hated being beaten by those tiny switches and the near impossibility of
setting them in place during reassembly when brain and sight were fried by an
already extremely arduous task. In short, I found hard manual labour more
easy to endure, and for longer. I can handle long tasks needing thought and
long term focus, but ONLY if I can actually see and feel what I'm doing...

As to Mac laptops though, there is very little I will attempt.


There are Technics amps like that. :) I found that getting into one was like
a Chinese puzzle box. They really didn't want freelancers getting in there.

I mentioned recently buying an Eee machine (Asus), in some post a few weeks
back. That too found its way to the nearest wall, via an impact on the floor.
I have no regrets. The time spent doing otherwise, now THAT I might easily
have regretted. What was cool is that its hard disk and RAM survived the
impact, and the disk will go into some ITX machine, probably replacing a CF
card in the small 1U rack.

I think what I have learned from all this is that I should NEVER, despite
often getting it wrong yet again, trust in a machine I cannot service and
maintain and alter to my own needs, with my own resources. If there was no
way I could get that need met without buying off-the-shelf complete boxes
this might make less sense, but I have found little to tempt me to move on,
and only a recent uptake of coding will tempt me to run a few things other,
just to test how far I can stretch compatibility....

Lostgallifreyan April 15th 12 11:12 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
"Buffalo" wrote in :

I bought a pci usb 2.0 card for under $10 and it works fine. Check to see
that any card you buy will work on Win98SE. I believe you need Win98SE to
make most work.


NUSB. Long story, so I'll say not much about it. Other than this: Install it
early, right after OS install, for best results, and check that your USB2 hub
driver is supplied by the maker, the NUSB native one won't work for Via
boards, other mainboards may need similar replacement, before NUSB will work
for USB2. (As this needs a maker's replacement, it may be that they'll do for
you all that NUSB can do, but NUSB is very good, and more generalised).

philo April 15th 12 11:26 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
On 04/15/2012 05:07 PM, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
wrote in :

Yep. I did not think of that one.
Though I do laptop repairs I consider it more akin to watch repair.


You have far more patience than I have. :) And it's a valid comparison. While
the screws are larger, the unusual fittings, and precision needed, aren't far
off handling a watch, which I tried a few times as a kid. Sony Walkmans are
another trial by ordeal. I threw one across a room. The owner was
sympathetic, but he could see I was more distressed than he had reason to be.
I hated being beaten by those tiny switches and the near impossibility of
setting them in place during reassembly when brain and sight were fried by an
already extremely arduous task. In short, I found hard manual labour more
easy to endure, and for longer. I can handle long tasks needing thought and
long term focus, but ONLY if I can actually see and feel what I'm doing...

As to Mac laptops though, there is very little I will attempt.


There are Technics amps like that. :) I found that getting into one was like
a Chinese puzzle box. They really didn't want freelancers getting in there.

I mentioned recently buying an Eee machine (Asus), in some post a few weeks
back. That too found its way to the nearest wall, via an impact on the floor.
I have no regrets. The time spent doing otherwise, now THAT I might easily
have regretted. What was cool is that its hard disk and RAM survived the
impact, and the disk will go into some ITX machine, probably replacing a CF
card in the small 1U rack.

I think what I have learned from all this is that I should NEVER, despite
often getting it wrong yet again, trust in a machine I cannot service and
maintain and alter to my own needs, with my own resources. If there was no
way I could get that need met without buying off-the-shelf complete boxes
this might make less sense, but I have found little to tempt me to move on,
and only a recent uptake of coding will tempt me to run a few things other,
just to test how far I can stretch compatibility....



In general, before I disassemble a laptop I search on-line for a
tutorial. Though they are rarely intuitive quite of few of them are
simple to work on once you know the little secrets.

But even with a tutorial some mac laptops are pretty difficult and I
swore I'd never buy one...but I was forced into it as when I bought my
Lytro, it's currently only possible to use it with a Mac



--
https://www.createspace.com/3707686

Lostgallifreyan April 15th 12 11:41 PM

Upgrading USB Port to 2.0
 
philo wrote in :

In general, before I disassemble a laptop I search on-line for a
tutorial. Though they are rarely intuitive quite of few of them are
simple to work on once you know the little secrets.


I should do that more. I still have a habit of tracing my own way, rather
than get info in advance, a habit born of old need, but I am doing it
sometimes. Grooved rivets for flightcases... Good thing I DID look that up
first, there's more to it than I had any clue about. I might have made a
pig's ear of my recent modifications..


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