

Sea7K*2 = Two Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 1TB SATA HDD in RAID 0 setĮnyo = OCZ Enyo USB 3.0 solid state drive (128GB) USB2 = built-in USB 2.0 port on 2010 Mac Pro UXcard = LaCie USB 3.0 ExpressCard/34 installed in 2010 MacBook Pro Core i7ĮXcard = Sonnet Tempo Pro eSATA ExpressCard/34 in 2010 MacBook Pro Core i7įW800 = built-in FireWire 800 port on 2010 Mac Pro USB3 = CalDigit USB 3.0 PCIe host adapter installed in 2010 Mac Pro 6 Core Westmere RED means fastest ORANGE indicates USB 3.0 storageĮSATA = FirmTek SeriTek/2ME4-E 4 port eSATA PCIe adapter and SerTek/2EN2 Dual Bay enclosure In the graphs below, RED means fastest ORANGE indicates USB 3.0 storage And to answer the obvious, we have included one or more example of the same or similar storage devices running on USB 2.0, FireWire 800, and eSATA ports. To get the party started, we've gathered various USB 3.0 storage devices to show you the speed potential for your Mac Pro and MacBook Pro (with ExpressCard slot). FireWire 800 and USB 2.0 just became "so yesterday." So how much faster is it than USB 2.0 and FireWire 800? And is SATA still faster? How? They released USB 3.0 host adapters with Mac OS X drivers. With the USB-C to Ethernet adapter, you can retrieve your entire Internet speed with the included Ethernet port and no longer lose connectivity during larger meetings.Great news! Both Caldigit and LaCie have "cracked the code" on Mac support of USB 3.0.

Simply expand the functions of your MacBook. It has 4K HDMI, 1000Mbps Ethernet, 100W Thunderbolt 3 port, 2 USB 3.0 ports and SD/Micro SD card slots. 7-in-2 USB C Hub for Macbook Pro: This Macbook Pro adapter is a great upgrade for the new MacBook Pro/Air with limited ports.
