USB
USB (Universal Serial Bus) enables peripheral devices such as portable disk drives, printers, and digital cameras to easily connect to a PC. Wireless USB adds the capability to seamlessly connect these devices without cabling. The theoretical maximum data rate of USB 2.0 and wireless USB is 480 Mb/s and USB 3.0 will operate at 5 Gb/s.
Webinars
- Simplifying Validation and Debug of USB 3.0 Designs Webinar
Universal Serial Bus has become known as the de facto standard for connecting personal computers and other peripheral devices. In this webinar you will learn techniques and tools to simplify the validation and debug progress for USB 3.0 PHY designs and the concepts needed to tackle the latest challenges in USB 3.0 transmitter, receiver and cable/channel testing.
View All Serial Data Webinars
These webinars will cover serial data fundamentals including clock recovery, jitter analysis and compliance testing. Additional advanced topics include receiver testing and equalization.
Application Notes
USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 Compliance Fact Sheets
Fast, efficient solutions for USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 compliance measurement challenges. Tektronix provides all the USB compliance test solutions you need.USB Technology Fact Sheet
This fact sheet describes the key elements of USB and the Tektronix solution.Simplifying Validation and Debug of USB 3.0 Designs
Superspeed USB's increased data rate of 5Gb/s brings critical signal transmission and signal fidelity challenges that require highly accurate and versatile test solutions. Learn about the tools available to meet your USB 3.0 design challenges in this application note.Understanding and Performing USB 2.0 Testing
This application note focuses on understanding and performing USB 2.0 physical layer measurements and electrical compliance testing (electrical and high speed tests) and will include a discussion of the instruments required for each test.The Basics of Serial Data Compliance and Validation Measurements
This primer is designed to help you understand the common aspects of serial data transmission and to explain the analog and digital measurement requirements that apply to these emerging serial technologies.- View All
