• MeanEYE
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      999 months ago

      I can bet you it’s incompetence. They failed upwards. Sure, protocol is great and universal, but connector is atrocious and it has nothing to do with cost. Few points in favor of this hypothesis:

      1. Plastic inside of the connector was initially black. Why chose hard to see color? Go with something easier to see;
      2. Connector is perfectly rectangular and only distinguishing feature they made hard to see. Don’t make ti symmetrical if it’s not reversible, basic design principle;
      3. Connector is perfectly rectangular making it difficult to insert. There’s a reason why most connectors have rounded corners, they are self-correcting, even TypeC does this;
      4. They made various different connector types but pushed for the only one with these issues. No one ever had doubts how type B or mini B or micro B go in.
      • Captain Aggravated
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        529 months ago

        Initially, the plastic inside the connector was white. They started to use black to denote USB2.0 devices, and USB2.0 rapidly became the standard. They at least tried to do something similar with blue plastic with USB3.0.

        It’s basically the only example I can think of where the plug and socket are rotationally symmetrical without also being reversible. That’s the kind of thing where I ask “did you test this before you shipped it?” Thirty years later we’re still plagued by the damn thing.

        • MeanEYE
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          39 months ago

          Right you are. Completely forgot about that. That said, I don’t think USB1 was a standard for too long. If I remember correctly it went to 2.0 pretty fast.

          • @[email protected]
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            39 months ago

            If you had Macs, USB 1 was around a lot earlier, and really only good for peripherals and HID for a long time. FireWire and external SCSI drives were necessary because USB 1 wasn’t even viable for anything beyond external floppy drives. USB2 was a boon to external drives and bigger thumb drives, but took a while to arrive at the time.

            • MeanEYE
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              19 months ago

              I don’t think I had anything with USB1 in it. Even the early Pentium machines had USB2.

              • @[email protected]
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                9 months ago

                I built a Pentium 2 in 1998 and needed a separate pci card to add usb 1.1 (which was what most early Usb was) USB2 came out in 2000. By then I was ready to upgrade the motherboard and the next one had USB built in, but I can’t remember if it was usb 2 or not, since that might have been late 99

                • MeanEYE
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                  19 months ago

                  I can’t remember either, it’s been a while. :)

      • @[email protected]
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        429 months ago

        Also a male USB 2 plug fits perfectly into a RJ45 slot :-/ In my days of tech support, I’ve seen multiple people plugging their USB printer cable into the network slot of their computer and it’s a perfect fit so they were always convinced they didn’t do anything wrong… That’s clearly a design flaw while all other connectors have distinct sizes.

        • MeanEYE
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          119 months ago

          Never heard of people plugging USB into LAN, but now that you mention it they are the same size. Luckily all the contacts are shielded.

          • @[email protected]
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            69 months ago

            I’ve done it myself when feeling the back of a pc and trying to get away without looking. I’ve been doing IT support since high school.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          Way back before USB, joysticks had a DIN-25 connector that was identical to the MIDI network connector.

          I blindly plugged my brand new MS Force Feedback joystick into the MIDI network port behind my miditower (yes I’m that old) and watched the magic smoke rise out of the joystick. That was not a good day to learn about plugs. The network carries 50 volts or something. Stick wasn’t happy.

          edit: corrections! Here’s a photo of the network card: https://i.imgur.com/fBJixkM.png

          • Björn Tantau
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            69 months ago

            Strange. I always thought they were the exact same port. Because most of the time you would need a sound card to plug in a joystick. And nowadays I can’t use my MS Force Feedback because all the USB adaptors don’t implement all of the MIDI stuff the joystick needs to run the force feedback.

            • @[email protected]
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              59 months ago

              Oh you are right, I misremembered: what actually happened was that I was indeed going for the MIDI port of my SoundBlaster card but found a matching socket in my networrk card!

              I will update my comment to correct this.

        • MrScottyTay
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          9 months ago

          My girlfriend works in IT at a school so I asked if she’s encountered this too. She said “all the time, they’re right next to each other” she also added that a lot of people put their thin charging cables into the headphone jack breaking their laptops. And that for some of them they “fit better” in that jack than the one it’s meant to go in.

      • P03 Locke
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        359 months ago

        No one ever had doubts how type B or mini B or micro B go in.

        I agree with most of your post, but micro B is a step too far. That fucking plug was always inserted with the following procedure:

        1. Try to plug it in.
        2. Flip the side and try to plug it in again.
        3. Flip it again because you had the right damn side the first time.

        Always, always, always.

        • @out
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          deleted by creator

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            Mini B was rated for something like 10x fewer insertion cycles than micro B, the retaining tabs would give out and the connector would fall off… or worse, twist and break the socket’s inner plastic bit.

            • Björn Tantau
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              39 months ago

              For some reason I always had fewer problems (meaning none) with mini B breaking than with micro B or C breaking.

              • @[email protected]
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                39 months ago

                In my experience, Mini B was mostly used for data transfer, along with some other port to do the charging. Micro B got introduced as the “all in one” data+charging port. I’ve seen both kinds of ports break, but only the Mini B ones that were also used for charging; the data-only ones, were fine.

                My conclusion is that charging ports use more insertion cycles and are more likely to break, and I keep magnetic charging adapters in all of them (as a side effect, twisting the cable or pulling at an angle just disconnects it, instead of breaking the port).

        • MeanEYE
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          -19 months ago

          Well, if nothing else it’s easier to than type A.

      • @[email protected]
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        219 months ago

        Hindsight is 20/20. You’re raising every issue with the original USB plug, then proceed to highlight how they addressed these issues going forward.

        You’re describing inexperience and calling it incompetence.

        • @[email protected]
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          AFAIK the real predecessor to USB was Serial cables and those were an absolute shit show. USB set out to create a more usable interface with a lower profile and cheaper cost. In many ways the minor flaws in USB becoming common gripes is USB becoming a victim of its own success. I don’t think they originally set out to become a power charging standard so the frequency at which devices were plugged in increased over time .

          • @[email protected]
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            59 months ago

            At least serial cables weren’t symmetric, although just barely. AT and PS/2 cables (or any DIN) were much more of a pain for me to plug in blind.

        • deaf_fish
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          I don’t even know that I would call it inexperience. I just think a major part of the first pass was selling the idea of USB. You can design a perfect cable, plug, and protocol, it doesn’t mean anyone will use it. Most investors don’t know much about the technical details of a product. They do, however, understand the price. If you’re trying to make a difference in the world, you don’t always get to do it with style and quality.

      • @[email protected]
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        179 months ago

        No one ever had doubts how type B or mini B or micro B go in.

        How lucky you were to never have a device that had one of these upside-down.

    • @[email protected]
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      249 months ago

      Considering the much higher cost of production then vs now, it makes complete sense. The economy of scale took care of that problem with time.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        Naw, USB-A is much more secure. I plug that end into my power bank, throw it in a bag or my pocket, and it’ll disconnect maybe 1 time out of the 100 that the USB-C or Lightning end does. It is a little larger, though.

      • TWeaK
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        -149 months ago

        I just wish they didn’t come with chips inside our cables.

        • Bobby Turkalino
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          9 months ago

          A chip can literally just contain basic logic gates. Your aversion to them is based on pure Qanon fiction

          • StarDreamer
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            9 months ago

            “But what if they start putting fries in my ports? I can’t have fries without any ketchup!”

          • TWeaK
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            39 months ago

            My aversion to them is an aversion to unnecessary overhead. A cable is a cable, it shouldn’t be a third device.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            No, the chip is a microcontroller with firmware. You can try to do it in pure logic but it’s a waste of effort and development resources.

      • tetris11
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        149 months ago

        The reply is pretty self-explanatory too. The cable exists in a 4-dimensional space.

        • @[email protected]
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          189 months ago

          You guys joke about this, but he managed to create a connector with three sides: up, down, and “oh yeah the first side was the correct one”

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          “In geometry and physics, spinors /spɪnər/ are elements of a complex number-based vector space that can be associated with Euclidean space.[b] A spinor transforms linearly when the Euclidean space is subjected to a slight (infinitesimal) rotation,[c] but unlike geometric vectors and tensors, a spinor transforms to its negative when the space rotates through 360° (see picture). It takes a rotation of 720° for a spinor to go back to its original state. This property characterizes spinors: spinors can be viewed as the “square roots” of vectors (although this is inaccurate and may be misleading; they are better viewed as “square roots” of sections of vector bundles – in the case of the exterior algebra bundle of the cotangent bundle, they thus become “square roots” of differential forms).”


          Seems pretty self-explanatory to me! /s

  • @[email protected]
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    1229 months ago

    About a decade ago or so, I found myself in a reddit argument with someone that claimed they had never attempted to plug a USB in unsuccessfully. They said that every single time they’ve plugged in, it was the correct way. Some people are insane.

    • @[email protected]
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      579 months ago

      Honestly, with high quality USB A plugs you could feel the logo on the side that was “up”, and if you knew which side your motherboard or front panel considered “up”, it’d be easy to always plug devices in correctly.

      Just that the vast majority of manufacturers stopped caring relatively early on, which meant you couldn’t rely on it anymore.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        The logo isn’t that reliable but it’s usually slim side up. Not sure about sideways ports though.

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            I say usually but it’s basically the rule. Of all my things only the QNAP NAS has a slim side down port, and maybe that’s some other convention I’m not aware of since it’s for the copy-data port. That’s among a random pile consisting of a Cisco networking equipment, Intel NUC, old macbook, new microsoft and HP laptops, a hdmi/usb switch, ps4, and a raspberry pi

    • StarDreamer
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      249 months ago
      1. Attempt to plug in the USB A device
      2. If you succeed. End procedure
      3. Otherwise, destroy the reality you currently reside in. All remaining universes are the ones where you plugged in the device on the first try.

      That wasn’t so hard, was it?

    • @[email protected]
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      Perhaps a controversial opinion here, but the usefulness of reversibility is vastly overrated. It’s not a game changer, just a tiny first-world luxury that’s nice to have, but it does it by introducing a bunch of unnecessary complexity that I’d rather avoid. Not worth the trade off IMO. I can count on one hand the number of minutes USB-C has saved me by being reversible and I honestly don’t care

      • @[email protected]
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        209 months ago

        I’m happier with how long usb c last before they start getting finicky than I am the reversiblity.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          In theory, USB-C should be better, but in practice, the quality control is all over the place.

          All of my micro USB cables and ports have lasted just fine. I used one daily with my phone for 10+ years with no issues, and I’ve only had maybe two cables ever actually fail. Meanwhile, I’ve already had at least 5 USB-C cables or dongles that have fully failed, and plus the primary USB-C charging port on a laptop just completely die. I wish it was better, but it just isn’t.

          Also if USB-C was just replacing just micro USB I’d be ok with that. But the problem is they’re also replacing USB-A, and Type C is not nearly as durable as Type A since it’s so small, it’s just physically impossible. I wish they made a larger version of the Type C port. Same shape, same pins, just bigger in every dimension. As large as Type A, for durability.

          I’m not a big fan of Apple, but the lightning connector is just better, physically. It’s way more durable in practice since it’s just a solid piece. I wish USB-C was designed that way instead of what we actually got.

      • @[email protected]
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        109 months ago

        The issue is that USBC was the first standard to really take the mechanical design process seriously in a consumer context. In doing so, it was made both way more ergonomic and way more durable. I’d argue that without the focus on some of these “small but marketable” consumer-oriented bits, we would not have gotten the great overall connector design we did.

        • @[email protected]
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          -29 months ago

          I’m not a big fan of Apple, but the lightning connector is just better, physically. It’s way more durable in practice since it’s just a solid piece. I wish USB-C was designed that way instead of what we actually got.

          • @[email protected]
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            39 months ago

            If I recall correctly, Lightning connectors are designed in a way that makes the port more likely to wear out. USB-C is designed in a way that makes the cable more likely to wear out. I would rather replace my $5 charging cable than replace my $150 (or more!) phone.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        I am just laughing here because I spent the day dealing with ancient serial tech pigtails and DB9s. You people have no idea the pain of losing multiple days of your life trying to get RS-232 to work. Especially when stuff doesn’t follow the standards it is supposed to follow.

      • P03 Locke
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        Yes, you’re right: that was controversial.

    • LazaroFilm
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      189 months ago

      Well if you only plugged one USB in your life you have a 50% chance of never having plugged it in wrong.

    • @[email protected]
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      I mean if you tend to plug things in at the same computer a lot it’s pretty easy to always plug things in right the first time, even when not looking because you just kinda know what way it’s meant to be. And laptops usually have all theirs pointing the same way so you know one you know them all. If something has text on it, it’s usually oriented in such a way that when plugged in you can read it. Or they have a little face and you know which way the face is meant to be facing

      I have a similar “power” and while I’m not flawless, it’s only really new or unfamiliar devices/computers that trip me up. Or plugs that don’t actually have any identifying features and/or unusual ones

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      Well, I rarely fail because I look inside the connector and see where the plastic is and then plug it properly. I tend to fail when I cannot see inside the connector because it’s in a weird spot.

      I guess the redditor was either bragging about always looking inside or was a kid

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      That person is either a flat out liar, or they are incredibly anal and waste a lot of time looking at the connector and input every single time they connect a cable.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        I don’t really have a problem looking at the connector before plugging it in. I thought this was an overblown meme.

        • @[email protected]
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          39 months ago

          I do not have a problem with looking at the connector when I can see it. But often enough I am fumbling a cable into some connector behind a PC, docking station or at night when the light is out.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      If you can see through the two rectangular cutouts on the plug, it’s the right way around. Unfortunately, this doesn’t help if the plug is turned 90°, and also some computers have it upside down (looking at you, GPD).

    • R0cket_M00se
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      09 months ago

      If it’s on a laptop I could see it. The empty half almost always needs to be on top on the male side because the female end is almost always plastic on top.

  • @[email protected]
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    1219 months ago

    Somewhat understandable, but they could’ve also done something like HDMI and DisplayPort and gone with a shape that could only plug in one way. It might not have been “as cheap as possible” but probably not as much added expense as the extra wiring and stuff. (maybe, idk shit about manufacturing)

      • @[email protected]
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        259 months ago

        The problem there is at least as much from how hard it is to twist the cables as it is from the connector shape. The asymmetric connector is still better than nothing.

        I can think of some examples of asymmetric connectors that work great: mini USB; North American 3-prong power plugs; old school PC video, serial, and game ports; original NES controller connections, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      339 months ago

      I really wish hdmi was symmetrical. (Peer behind tv, “which way goes up?” Tries to plug it in, “fml it was the other way” flips it drops it)

      • @[email protected]
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        I wish too, mainly because HDMI cables are much less flexible and twisting them 180° can create tension.

      • sverit
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        19 months ago

        Unfortunately HDMI already uses pins on both sides of the connector, so you would have to shrink them to half their size first, then double them.

    • ChaoticNeutralCzech
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      119 months ago

      Not all asymmetric port designs are good. SCART was capable – HDMI of the 1990s-2000s – but you cannot really feel where one ends and another begins with 2-3 of them in the rear of almost every TV and VCR sold in Europe back then. They carried flawless RGB video, two-way composite A/V, remote control signals etc. However, they were bulky (why 21 individually shielded wires instead of twisted pairs?), expensive and got loose easily. This was before digital technology that enabled error correction and multiplexing.

  • Margot Robbie
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    1109 months ago

    But in practical use, people found out that even a 50/50 chance of plugging the connector in the right way is annoying enough to warrant the additional complexity of reversability, hence the development of USB Type C.

    The USB-C design turned out to be much more durable and versatile (signal and power wise) in addition to reversability compared to the previous USB designs, and it is developed specifically to address the problems people found with USB-A/B/MicroUSB.

    Sometimes problems only reveal themselves through real life usage, and iterative improvement through a scientific trial and error process to address these problem is how you get development progress.

    • @[email protected]
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      479 months ago

      For USB-A, it’s usually not even 50/50. It’s the witchcraft superposition when the first two tries don’t work.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        Yeah, people don’t take into account quantum positioning, pass-through phenomenon, or the fact that I can’t “see” when I plug it in wrong and that makes me think maybe my fingers are dumb and I missed the hole and not that I need to reverse it and try again.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        First try doesn’t go in: oh I guess I have to flip it. Second try doesn’t go in, fiddle it a bunch still doesn’t go in. Fuck I had it the first time. Third try goes in immediately

    • @[email protected]
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      129 months ago

      I wish it was 50/50. A lot of the time it wouldn’t plug in so I flipped it. Still didn’t work so I flipped it back to the original orientation and it magically plugs in.

    • @[email protected]
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      Can someone explain to me why I keep reading about people having problems plugging in USB A connectors upside down? I feel like I’m taking crazy pills. Per the spec, the holes always go up. They indicate the correct way to plug in the port. Not only that, but the printed logo on the connector also always goes up.

      The only time this is SLIGHTLY confusing is if you have a desktop tower where the motherboard is essentially mounted sideways, but for that case it just takes an extra second to think which way is “up” from the perspective of the motherboard.

      And before anyone says “who reads the spec?”, it feels like I subconsciously knew this for something like a decade before I even knew what a spec was.

      • @[email protected]
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        89 months ago

        I’ve seen enough devices with the usb ports mounted upside down, for whatever strange reason. Also sometimes you want to plug something in without looking, this is much easier with USB-C

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          That’s wild, I’ve never seen an upside down port.

          I agree reversibility is better and am happy usb c will finally kill this meme.

      • StarDreamer
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        Sometimes you’re working on an IoT device in a tight space, which makes rotating/seeing everything much harder.

        Especially if you drop the cable it falls into a crevice somewhere.

        You probably won’t have trouble plugging it in the first time, but gods forbid you unplug/replug it then the cable rotates 540 degrees and you have no idea how it was plugged in before

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Yeah that’s fair. But I feel like I’ve seen these “USB superposition” memes since before IoT was even a thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    they should just go with perfectly circular, with different sizes for different applications. imagine a 20mm unit - high power/bandwidth hoses with a satisfying locking mechanism that magnetically seals the connection.

    and makes the proton pack sound. and rgb fuck nevermind go back this was a bad idea

    • @[email protected]
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      419 months ago

      Circular isn’t a great idea, and here are most of the idea why it is not : https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/528821/why-dont-we-have-a-circular-usb-port

      USB required to have a stable connexion, as it’s a digital signal and not an analog as jack ports, which just sends curent through it. Rotating the connector could maybe introduce issues for signal integrity.

      The usb connector has much more connectors than a jack port. It would take a very long hole to fit them all. (usb 3+, usb C…)

      Size constraint. USB C is flat, a round port is not. So it’s bigger in 1 way, but smaller in the other, and so creates more design challenges.

      • @[email protected]
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        Round is not round, that is, there’s a difference between the likes of cinch and DIN (-style) connectors. Cinch can be rotated once inserted which indeed isn’t ideal, but DIN are perfectly adequate signal-wise and you can rotate them into place, just like finding the begging of a thread when inserting a screw.

        Keyboards used five-pole DIN for the longest time and mice D-Sub (because serial), both changed to Mini-DIN 6, aka “PS/2 connectors”. And never, ever, did anyone complain about getting the orientation wrong with DIN connectors.

        D-Sub are a bit iffy but at least you really do have a 50/50 chance as they don’t jam like USB-A does. They also aren’t actually rectangular and you can feel the matching angles on both female and male ends.

        Really, connectors went downhill with USB. HDMI and DisplayPort aren’t really any better as you can’t feel the shape of the socket, either. OTOH, one really nasty connector becomes rarer and rarer: Molex. Also you can’t fry your motherboard by connecting the main power connection in the wrong way, any more (remember: Black to black).

        • Doubletwist
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          239 months ago

          And never, ever, did anyone complain about getting the orientation wrong with DIN connectors.

          Hah! Hardly. I have plenty of memories of endlessly rotating mouse and keyboard connectors as I reached behind a computer trying to insert it blindly, and somehow having to try half a dozen times before it finally found just the right orientation.

          There’s also the issue on the older, large DIN connectors of pins getting bent or broken.

          We moved on from those things for darn good reason, and I for one have no interest in going back.

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            I never bent a pin and as said, you can just turn them and at some point they’ll align.

            The main downfall of DIN was foreign hifi companies standardising on cinch and SCART and German hifi manufacturers then switching over. You’ll still see them in niche applications, though, probably the most common is MIDI.

              • @[email protected]
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                19 months ago

                You’re not supposed to simultaneously press with the force of five titans on steroids.

              • @[email protected]
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                39 months ago

                Nah that’s XLR. More sturdy, they lock, and usually carry balanced signals. It’s a pro audio thing and I’ve never seen it used for digital signals, DIN back in the day was in used for consumer stuff just as cinch is now. You probably also couldn’t send as much phantom power over DIN.

                Both 3-pin XLR and 3-pin DIN are mono, but in DIN’s case that’s input/output, not balanced audio. From a consumer perspective that’s very nice: Connecting a cassette player/recorder to the amp only uses a single 5-pin DIN cable.

      • @[email protected]
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        139 months ago

        We could have a compact version, say 3.5mm, with different segments to carry different signal types. More segments can be added to allow for additional features. It could work with audio, video, power, and other data transfer. That would fit ideally into a phone.

  • @[email protected]
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    819 months ago

    It’s not an issue of not being reversible. The problem is that it is symmetrical without being reversible. HDMI and DisplayPort are much less annoying. Even USB Type B (printer cables) is relatively easy to figure out orientation for.

      • @[email protected]
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        159 months ago

        Mini is fine. Micro is very close to being symmetrical that it might as well be. For cables that small, reversible is the way to go.

        • naticus
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          9 months ago

          My biggest problem with those was that mini didn’t have a strong enough friction fit and would become loose easily, and micro would wear down and break so easily. Luckily it seems that USB C has all the right qualities. It’s symmetrical but reversible, it’s durable, it clicks into place well, and it’s form works well on desktop, laptop, and mobile equally.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      I actually think that a big part of the problem isn’t reversibility or symmetricality, it’s that that the ports themselves are not designed in a way that easily accepts the cable blind, and I think the best example of the way it should be is probably the SCOMP link. Or for those of that aren’t super nerds, the star wars connector that R2 uses to stop the trash compactor, amongst other things.

      Look at that thing. R2 could be stumbling around drunk after a weekend droid bender and still find the target. Now, I’m not saying that it should be that large, but imagine fi the receiving port had a 1-2mm meniscus like curve that allowed you to find the target more easily, especially combined with a modern cable like USB-C. If we just look at the physical shape of the connectors, I think Lightning actually got this more correct than just about anyone else - look at a Lightning connector, and the male end has a very small curve on the sides of the connector to make it easier to actually get into the port. The female end also has a very subtle version of the thing I’m talking about.

      I think a real life connector should have a slightly more prominent version of this, especially if it’s going to be the one connector for literally everything. Like, plugging into the back of a monitor or PC you can’t quite reach or TV or something should be an easy no-look operation. I’ve ton tech support for decades, and there is basically no connector that doesn’t absolutely suck shit to try to plug in if you can’t actually see it. I want to be able to throw it from across the room and still have it stick though.

      For more on this topic, buy a coffee in a DT in a place that has to hold the reader out for you. Your dumb meat body is holding the card and moving slightly, the dumb meat body of the person taking the payment is moving slightly, so you end up try to jam the chip in a way that makes you both feel like you have a stack of learning disabilities. It’s just bad design.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Honesty, kinda? There are challenges to the connector when you introduce more connections than just tip-ring-sleeve, but the general vibe of it is pretty close.

  • @[email protected]
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    709 months ago

    I get why it’s not reversible. But why the hell is it not keyed so that is obvious which orientation is correct? A small, cheap, notch would have worked wonders.

    • @[email protected]
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      499 months ago

      Almost all connectors in use on computers at the time USB was introduced were already keyed, and a fat lot of good it did us. Ask anyone who tried fumbling around behind a three ton CRT monitor or computer case – even with the keyed connectors, feeling for which side was up, getting anything plugged in without eyes on it was already nigh on impossible.

      What the USB A connector did do which was new at the time was introduce a connector that did not have any protruding pins on either the male or female end, and thus theoretically at least could not be damaged by fucking up the insertion. Unlike any of the then-common D-Sub connectors (VGA, serial, parallel) or DIN (PS/2 mouse and keyboard, Apple serial, S-Video, etc.). USB didn’t even have the little clip to breal off like an RJ-45 Ethernet or RJ-11 phone line connector.

      • @[email protected]
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        59 months ago

        What the USB A connector did do which was new at the time

        Gameboy Link cable did that earlier and subsequently inspired the Firewire connector (and also happens to look a little like Type-C with the contacts in the middle).

      • PupBiru
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        49 months ago

        okay but the clip on rj connectors is a locking mechanism which usb just lacks… break off the clip and they’re relatively equvelent no?

        • @[email protected]
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          149 months ago

          No. USB uses friction retention, whereas a clip-retention cable sans clip has real risk of simply falling out.

      • El Barto
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        39 months ago

        What the USB A connector did do which was new at the time was introduce a connector that did not have any protruding pins on either the male or female end, and thus theoretically at least could not be damaged by fucking up the insertion.

        This is not true.

        Some 80s computers had cassette player interfaces that practically looked like big USB connectors.

        https://www.rarecomputers.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/back-picture-c64.jpg

    • squiblet
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      9 months ago

      There were the early USB plugs that were sort of weird notched trapezoids about 8 mm square (predecessor of mini and micro, USB-B). I always thought those were fine.

      Actually looking at this I’m surprised how many other styles there were.

    • Satelllliiiiiiiteeee
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      89 months ago

      I honestly think that FireWire 400 had a better physical design for the connector. It was keyed more dramatically than some of the other connectors people are citing as being both keyed and easy to orient incorrectly. I personally never had issues plugging in FireWire 400 blind.

    • verysoft
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      9 months ago

      The problem for me was never the plug, but the socket. It was obvious to me which side had the connectors, it’s the sockets on devices that would be random rotations most of the time. I never really understood the extreme hatred, while it wasn’t perfect, it worked well. I inserted successfully a lot more times than not, USB-A served us well in all honesty, but glad we have moved on to reversible.

    • HidingCat
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      39 months ago

      Keying does no good, have you tried fumbling with a serial port connection before? Same difference, and it’s keyed too.

      What’d have helped is clear markings and plug heads, like how some DIN connectors are done: The orientation simply cannot be missed.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        Yeah, it’s orientation I mean more than keying. USB-B was much easier to plug in than A. Orientation is very clear.

    • TWeaK
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      29 months ago

      Some USB sticks have the logo on one side, some have it on the other…

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          Seam goes down, as oriented to the motherboard. If the slots are vertical, usually to the right? If you have a rare, weird machine, just remember which way it goes. FFS, there are 2 choices.

          EDIT: Having said all that, not sure I’ve seen a machine that orients the seam to the left. ?

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        That’s true - I mean to make the keying more obvious. As it stands it’s all internal and difficult to see.

  • @[email protected]
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    529 months ago

    the decision was made to go with a design that, in theory, would give users a 50/50 chance of plugging it in correctly

    How could it be less than that? If it was triangular?

    • @[email protected]
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      269 months ago

      The PS2 (and AT) connectors keyboards and mice were largely using before USB were round…

      Arguably still better though because you could just rotate the plug until it went in instead of flipping it back and forth 5 times to get it to go in. And they also had more reliable indication for orientation.

      • TimeSquirrel
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        229 months ago

        you could just rotate the plug until it went in

        That was a good way to twist and bend up all the pins. Don’t you remember how fragile they were?

        • @[email protected]
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          59 months ago

          I meant to add a warning saying I may have bent a few pins that way 😅

          Twist gently…

          😳

      • TWeaK
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        19 months ago

        They still are widely used. There are certain things that you can’t do on some motherboards without a PS2 device.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      You know all the jokes about getting usb’s orientation right on first try, failing to push it in and trying the other way? Yeah, it was already worse than 50/50.

      Honestly that connector always felt like shit. A tiny, easily identifiable mark/notch/whatever on both plug and port would have made it a lot better, even if it was still non-reversible.

    • sverit
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      19 months ago

      Oh god please don’t give them ideas…

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    How many other plugs are reversible? HDMI and DisplayPort aren’t. Older stuff like scsi, gameports, parallel and serial ports and the like weren’t, and could even destroy your hardware if plugged into the wrong thing. Firewire and GameboyLink weren’t. Barrel plugs are insertable every way you want, but only have two contacts. And 3.5mm jacks slide over all the pins, which might not be great if you plan on carrying power.

    Lightning and USB Type-C are reversible, but that’s the only one I can think of. And the inoffiziell rarely seen reversible USB Type-A (when were those first released?).

    Biggest problem with USB Type-A is that it isn’t keyed in an obvious way, so both directions of insertions look and feel plausible until the thing doesn’t wanna fit.

    PS: Another thing “wrong” with USB is that Type-B isn’t a female Type-A, but a completely different thing, meaning a USB cable can’t be used as extension cord and you need a different cord for that. As I understand it, this was done deliberately to avoid issues with cable length and voltagedrop and signal degradation (which you run into anyway when using USB extension cords). There is also the hermaphroditic connector, which keeps the sides the same, while still allows extension cord use. Don’t know if anybody ever implemented that.

    • be_excellent_to_each_other
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      Most people weren’t adding and removing peripherals (and potentially multiple things using the same kind of connector) from their computers multiple times a day when many of your examples were in common consumer usage.

      Now we plug and unplug peripherals all the time, and for a great many people those multiple plug/unplug cycles are all using USB, and have been long enough to have plenty of frustration about this.

      I don’t think Type-A or its creator should burn in the depths of hell, but it’s a legitimate complaint for a usage case that most people didn’t experience prior to loosely about the time that USB started to rise in popularity, or so my recollection of the chain of events tells me.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        Depends, back in the home computer days swapping around joysticks and mouse (and less often lightpens and paddles) was a pretty common occurrence. And over in the console world we had multiple gamepads, multitabs, GameBoy Link cables and the like that also saw a ton of plug-in action.

        PC was somewhat special, since joysticks, keyboard, mouse and printers all used different ports, often only accessible on the hard to reach backside of the PC case and sometimes even screwed in. Hotplugging was also not officially supported. Those are however all the issues that USB was specifically designed to fix, so more plug-in action was to be expected.

        That said, it is quite true that reversibility really wasn’t a concern back than at all. None of the other ports had it, and USB was a huge improvement over previous PC port designs.

    • Zoolander
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      139 months ago

      I think the big thing with Firewire and DisplayPort, though, is that the port isn’t a rectangle. It’s flush on one size and angled on the other so that you know which way it plugs in no matter what. It being non-reversible wasn’t an issue because of that. USB, on the other hand, has the same shape whether it’s right-side-up or upside-down.

    • El Barto
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      99 months ago

      Yeah, I don’t think the complaints stem from the connector not being reversible but what you described in the last paragraph.

      • Billiam
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        89 months ago

        Yep. It’s not that it isn’t reversible, it’s that it’s non-reversible contacts inside a symmetrical connector.

    • MeanEYE
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      49 months ago

      Didn’t have to be reversible. Just obvious. Both HDMI and DisplayPort go in only one way. It takes fiddling but there’s no doubt. With USB it’s always you fiddle, doesn’t fit, then maybe it’s the other way around, doesn’t fit, oooh it was the original, doesn’t fit… ffs. And they even made the plastic black.

    • Paradox
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      49 months ago

      IBM token link connectors were hermaphroditic

    • StarDreamer
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      39 months ago

      I must be dumb cause I still need 3 tries to plug in a HDMI/DP port.

      USB B takes 6 tries: first three times in a RJ45 port, then 3 more after realizing I’ve been messing with the wrong port all this time.

  • @[email protected]
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    379 months ago

    TL:DR; It was cheaper and they figured if it didn’t work you could flip it over and try again. So it’s mildly inconvenient to save a few cents on manufacturing each connector and to limited the number is conductors to 4, something it turns out was a bad idea anyway because newer USB standards use more than 4 conductors.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        That is one way to deal with the problem, but it comes with its own tradeoffs. In particular that reversible type-a is incredibly fragile due to how thin the plastic supporting the pins needs to be to fit within the housing. They could make the plug bigger of course, but now you’re adding more cost and decreasing the areas the plug can potentially be used in due to its increased size. Conductor routing also becomes more problematic as you need to cross conductors to opposite sides now. Additionally while that cuts down on conductors needed in the actual cable, you still end up needing 8 pins/conductors in the plug, one set of 4 on each side of the plug.

  • @[email protected]
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    289 months ago

    What a pathetic excuse. You know what’s at the other end of a USB-A cable? A USB-B connector that didn’t have the symmetry problem. Also, Firewire existed around the same time (in fact, slightly earlier) and didn’t have the symmetry problem.

    • Paradox
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      89 months ago

      FireWire was an amazing interface, and nothing has quite come as close. The ability for devices on a FireWire daisy chain to talk to each other without the computer being involved made it excellent for storage

  • @[email protected]
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    229 months ago

    The worst thing about USB is that it always takes 3 attempts on average to get the fucker in if you don’t know the orientation of the port.

    • Enkrod
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      59 months ago

      Which proves that is has 4 dimensions of space!

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        That would explain why they were able to fit so many gigs into such a small little device and sell it for like, 20$.

  • @[email protected]
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    219 months ago

    the problem is the plug is rectangular (has exterior rotational symmetry) AND not reversible - if the plugs were L shaped it would be clear by both feel and brief glance which rotation was correct