SelectSettings and then Change PC settings. Select the Devices under PC settings application. As mdpc said, the device you plug the USB device into should have different signs or colours to show if the actual ports are USB 2 or 3: USB 2: USB 3 (the sign on the left image says 'SS' and the usb sign.
Thelatest entries, USB 4.0, Thunderbolt 3, and Thunderbolt 4, are where you'll find the highest data transfer speeds: a maximum capable throughput of 40 Gbps.
However a blue port is usually 5 Gbps, which means that it's SuperSpeed USB (aka USB 3.2 Gen 1, USB 3.1 Gen 1 or USB 3.0). Some manufacturers now use red USB ports to include SuperSpeed 10 Gbps
USB3.0 ports either have blue markings inside the port or they have “SS” for Super Speed or “3.0” written next to the port. USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 ports are all USB-C.
Mostmonitors have blue or teal ports that support USB 3.0 or 3.1. There are symbols to indicate which type of SuperSpeed of data transfer it supports: there's SuperSpeed with 5 Gbps data transfer on USB 3.1 and 3.2, and SuperSpeed+ supports 10 Gbps of data transfer with a USB-A or USB-B port. As mentioned above, a USB-C port
TheUSB 2 has been marketed by other names, including the high-speed USB. However, the USB 3 is quickly speeding past the USB 2 when it comes to the amount of speed that port can transfer and receive data. It has a speed of about 5 Gbps. It has been marketed by a special name, too. That name is Super Speed. Mostlaptops should have the USB3.0 ports as blue, as part of USB-IF's (the people who designed USB) marketing plan. The only sure way is to either check the uTJIq.
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/123
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/64
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/203
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/359
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/216
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/96
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/126
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/256
  • l1ygo75qoc.pages.dev/253
  • are all usb 3.0 ports blue