At a developer conference in California, the USB 3.0 Promoter Group has announced that the specification behind USB 3.0 has been finalised at version 1.0.
USB 3.0, or SuperSpeed USB as it'll be known in consumer devices, was first demonstrated in September 2007. With specification complete, we can now expect SuperSpeed USB controllers to appear as soon as next month, and consumer products will follow in 2010.
The specification, developed by a group consisting of Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Microsoft, NEC, ST-NXP Wireless and Texas Instruments, has been a long time coming and will make its way into the hands of consumers almost a decade after USB 2.0.
SuperSpeed USB devices will offer backward-compatibility with USB 2.0 or USB 1.1 ports, and it's more power-efficient, too, with support for idle, sleep and suspend states.
The most publicised improvement, of course, is that of performance. SuperSpeed USB 3.0 will live up to its name by providing a data transfer rate of up to 5Gbit/s - some ten times faster than USB 2.0.
Official press release: USB 3.0 SPECIFICATION NOW AVAILABLE