On Fri, 2003-02-14 at 17:22, David Brownell wrote: > Dan Parks wrote: > > Sorry I didn't give more info.... I was talking about the OUT > > transfers. We are currently transferring 64 bytes every millisecond, > > which is the fastest speed that USB 1.0 supports in isochronous mode. > > Hmm? Why "1.0" instead of "1.1"? 1023 bytes is the limit I recall. > Certainly one packet per frame, yes. > >
So this conversation has definitely proven that I am totally inept at explaining what I'm trying to say :-P I meant to say USB 1.1 (Since I NEVER deal with 1.0, just 2.0 and 1.1, I sometimes forget about it). 1023 bytes is the limit per transaction in isochronous, the 64 bytes was just what we send per millisecond per device (maximum of 16 devices). (I should have said 1023, since you obviously don't care about how we divide up our 1023 bytes). Dan ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.NET email is sponsored by: FREE SSL Guide from Thawte are you planning your Web Server Security? Click here to get a FREE Thawte SSL guide and find the answers to all your SSL security issues. http://ads.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/redirect.pl?thaw0026en _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, use the last form field at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-usb-devel