What is it Firewire?

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Nestor
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Post by Nestor »

Just what is it?
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astroman
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Post by astroman »

hi Nestor,

an excerpt from the link below:
...Since 1,393 standards had already been considered, their efforts were called IEEE 1394. Several of the elders from the house of Apple preferred a less numeric name and called their version of IEEE 1394, FireWire.

here the details: http://www.vxm.com/21R.49.html

cheers, Tom
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Post by Spirit »

Much faster than USB, but nowhere near as popular. Maybe with USB 2 it is in danger of fading away ?
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astroman
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Post by astroman »

Spirit, you're kidding - it's built in every current camcorder and on all mobos :grin:

cheers, Tom
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Nestor
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Post by Nestor »

Thanks, that's clear now... My confusion was that FireWire and IEEE 1394 were the same thing, and I assumed they were different... Cheers

BTW, yes, they are everywere, despite this, I've never used it myself yet...
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kensuguro
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Post by kensuguro »

mostly video capturing.. I've seen some mac users use firewire harddisks, but video in/out is probably the number 1 use for firewire.
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Nestor
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Post by Nestor »

Ok, this will be great for my video making in the future... What about music? How can we take advantage of this, are there options, special connexions? Anybody using it?
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kensuguro
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Post by kensuguro »

firewire audio devices (audio IO) are becoming more and more popular. Motu's got a few, believe the just released a new version of 828. Basically, what I think is cool about firewire is that notebooks have them. (atleast Mac Powerbooks do) and this means, you can have state of the art audio IO wherever you go. So, it's good for live performances, or on the spot recording (in the woods?) etc. I'm not sure what the true benefit would be on a desktop. The older 828 was good quality from my experience, and my video editing friend uses it on his desktop. So the quality is good. (don't have to worry too much)

Anyhow, the firewire audio IO trend shows that audio workstations are becoming more and more portable. That's a cool idea.
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Post by Immanuel »

Yes, that is good. What would be realy good would be, if Magma got some competition, so we can go CW portable a bit less expensive.
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Post by Spirit »

On 2003-06-28 14:20, astroman wrote:
Spirit, you're kidding - it's built in every current camcorder and on all mobos :grin:

cheers, Tom
No, I'm not kidding :smile: Firewire has been around for a long time and only just taken off (outside the Apple world). USB2 has only arrived lately and is already an equal competitor and (I think) has much better "brand recognition".

We must wait and see whether Firewire camcorders continue or if some manufacturers switch to USB2. This could be a real deadly blow to Firewire.

Also I must correct myself - Firewire is in fact *slower* than USB2. :oops:

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,844061,00.asp

Also this from PC Mag:

"USB 2.0 hard drives will continue to dominate the market, because FireWire is more expensive for PC manufacturers to implement. Most new desktop PC chipsets include integrated USB 2.0, making it essentially free. And soon all notebooks based on the Intel Centrino processor will have chipset support for USB 2.0. Meanwhile, many PCs still do not include FireWire ports, and FireWire is not fully integrated into any chipsets."



<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Spirit on 2003-06-29 11:10 ]</font>
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kensuguro
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Post by kensuguro »

true, firewire seems to be mainly an Apple thing.
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Post by dehuszar »

On 2003-06-29 10:54, Spirit wrote:

Also I must correct myself - Firewire is in fact *slower* than USB2. :oops:

<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Spirit on 2003-06-29 11:10 ]</font>


Not anymore. Check out 1394b. :smile:

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Post by kimgr »

On 2003-06-29 10:54, Spirit wrote:
Also I must correct myself - Firewire is in fact *slower* than USB2. :oops:
In theory yes, 480Mbit versus 400, but try and mount a Firewire/USB2 harddisk on the same system and benchmark it.
My results: Firewire = 34MB/sec, USB2 = 16MB/sec .....
USB2 controller chips might be cheaper, but they also seem to be a lot slower.

Kim.
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Post by braincell »

Remember when Apples all had SCSI? It seems Apple always picks the loser technology.
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Post by Nestor »

Everything serves something in a given time... now, it seems it's the time for Firewire...
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Post by astroman »

No Braincell, I won't pick up this ball :lol:
but I can assure you that without Apple's propagation there wouldn't be any USB on PC mobos at all. The standard was widely rejected in the PC press as 'too old fashioned', 'too slow', etc when it was introduced :grin:

cheers, Tom

<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: astroman on 2003-06-30 12:09 ]</font>
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Post by darkrezin »

On 2003-06-30 10:35, braincell wrote:
Remember when Apples all had SCSI? It seems Apple always picks the loser technology.
dude, that 'loser technology' got a hell of a lot of recordings made while PCs were still struggling with this realtime music stuff.

get a perspective.

(and I'm not a mac user incidentally) :wink:

peace
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kensuguro
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Post by kensuguro »

uh.. let's get on and forget the number war yeah?
Despite the speed issue and all, I capture DV with firewire, in fact, the program I'm working on uses live DV input from firewire. And there are also some other interesting audio devices for firewire.

Firewire's here right now, there are many devices built for firewire and they mostly work with good stability, as far as I know. I think that's all there is to it.
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Post by garyb »

why,you're right!
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darkrezin
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Post by darkrezin »

Damn right... I have a firewire hard drive and I really don't know how I could live without it.. it's got me out of some really tricky situations (for example weird networking scenarios), it rocks!

peace
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