All that you want to know about Micro USB

Micro-USB-connectors

Micro USB is a miniaturized description of the USB interface developed for connecting compact and mobile devices such as Mp3 players, smartphones, photo printers, GPS devices, and digital cameras. Micro USB connectors exist in three forms: micro A, micro B, and micro USB 3. USB 3 micro is much like micro B, but with a different pin group on the side for twice the wires, which allows USB 3’s greater speed. Like standard USB, the micro versions are plug-and-play and hot-swappable.

USB cables, cords, and ports are omnipresent nowadays. You are possibly familiar with various USB functions as USB connectors are necessary to charge most phones. They are also often used in other applications like USB flash drives.

The most familiar USB connector type is known as “Type A.” It has been around for decades, and you have certainly encountered these USBs at some point or another. As their name suggests, mini and micro USBs are less important than the regular Type A USB connector. They were launched to the market in 2005 and 2007 correspondingly. Both were predominately used for charging mobile phones and other devices like cameras, but they can also be used for data transfer.

Type C connectors are also tiny than standard Type A ones, Still they are fundamentally a modernized edition of the Type A. Type C connectors can upload and download data at once, a feature not present with Type A connectors. Type B connectors are square-shaped connectors, but they are mainly used to connect appliances like printers or copy machines to PCs or other devices.

Micro USB connectors specification is now planned to replace mini USB connectors in different types of portable devices, including cell phones and PDA’s. Micro USB offers several advantages. The most obvious advantage of this new technology is its smaller size. As cell phones and PDAs become lighter and thinner, customers often find the mini USB connector too large for practical use. The micro USB would enable manufacturers to push the limits of this trend toward sleeker design.

Compared to the mini USB connector, the micro USB is more hard-wearing. A micro USB comprises a stainless-steel shell to allow for more than 10,000 insertion cycles, and a latching mechanism that offers higher extraction forces without sacrificing the USB’s ease-of-use for synching and charging your portable devices.